The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Works of Robert G. Ingersoll, Complete Contents This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook. Title: The Works of Robert G. Ingersoll, Complete Contents Author: Robert Green Ingersoll Editor: David Widger Release date: February 9, 2012 [eBook #38813] Most recently updated: June 3, 2021 Language: English Credits: David Widger *** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WORKS OF ROBERT G. INGERSOLL, COMPLETE CONTENTS *** THE WORKS OF ROBERT G. INGERSOLL, CONTENTS OF THE 12 VOLUMES By Robert G. Ingersoll Edited and Compiled by David Widger "The Destroyer Of Weeds, Thistles And Thorns Is A Benefactor, Whether He Soweth Grain Or Not." 1900 THE DRESDEN EDITION VOLUME I.--LECTURES DETAILED CONTENTS OF VOLUME I. PUBLISHER'S PREFACE. THE GODS HUMBOLDT. THOMAS PAINE INDIVIDUALITY. HERETICS AND HERESIES. THE GHOSTS. THE LIBERTY OF MAN, WOMAN, AND CHILD. LIBERTY OF WOMAN. THE LIBERTY OF CHILDREN. CONCLUSION. ABOUT FARMING IN ILLINOIS WHAT MUST WE DO TO BE SAVED? I. WHAT WE MUST DO TO BE SAVED II. THE GOSPEL OF MATTHEW III. THE GOSPEL OF MARK IV. THE GOSPEL OF LUKE. V. THE GOSPEL OF JOHN VI. THE CATHOLICS VII. THE EPISCOPALIANS VIII. THE METHODISTS IX. THE PRESBYTERIANS X. THE EVANGELICAL ALLIANCE. XI. WHAT DO YOU PROPOSE? DETAILED CONTENTS OF VOLUME I. THE GODS. (1872.) An Honest God is the Noblest Work of ManóResemblance of Gods to their CreatorsóManufacture and Characteristics of DeitiesóTheir AmoursóDeficient in many Departments of KnowledgeóPleased with the Butchery of UnbelieversóA Plentiful SupplyóVisitationsóOne God's Laws of WaróThe Book called the BibleóHeresy of UniversalismóFaith an unhappy mixture of Insanity and IgnoranceóFallen Gods, or DevilsóDirections concerning Human SlaveryóThe first Appearance of the DevilóThe Tree of KnowledgeóGive me the Storm and Tempest of ThoughtóGods and Devils Natural ProductionsóPersonal Appearance of DeitiesóAll Man's Ideas suggested by his SurroundingsóPhenomena Supposed to be Produced by Intelligent PowersóInsanity and Disease attributed to Evil SpiritsóOrigin of the PriesthoodóTemptation of ChristóInnate IdeasóDivine InterferenceóSpecial ProvidenceóThe Crane and the FishóCancer as a proof of DesignóMatter and ForceóMiracleóPassing the Hat for just one FactóSir William Hamilton on Cause and EffectóThe Phenomena of MindóNecessity and Free WillóThe Dark AgesóThe Originality of RepetitionóOf what Use have the Gods been to Man?óPaley and DesignóMake Good Health ContagiousóPeriodicity of the Universe and the Commencement of Intellectual FreedomóLesson of the ineffectual attempt to rescue the Tomb of Christ from the MohammedansóThe Cemetery of the GodsóTaking away CrutchesóImperial Reason HUMBOLDT. (1869.) The Universe is Governed by LawóThe Self-made ManóPoverty generally an AdvantageóHumboldt's Birth-placeóHis desire for TravelóOn what Humboldt's Fame dependsóHis Companions and FriendsóInvestigations in the New WorldóA PictureóSubjects of his AddressesóVictory of the Church over PhilosophyóInfluence of the discovery that the World is governed by LawóOn the term LawóCopernicusóAstronomyóAryabhattaó DescartesóCondition of the World and Man when the morning of Science DawnedóReasons for Honoring HumboldtóThe World his Monument THOMAS PAINE. (1870.) With his Name left out the History of Liberty cannot be WrittenóPaine's Origin and ConditionóHis arrival in America with a Letter of Introduction by FranklinóCondition of the Coloniesó"Common Sense"óA new Nation BornóPaine the Best of Political WritersóThe "Crisis"óWar not to the Interest of a trading NationóPaine's Standing at the Close of the RevolutionóClose of the Eighteenth Century in France-The "Rights of Man"óPaine Prosecuted in Englandó"The World is my Country"óElected to the French AssemblyóVotes against the Death of the KingóImprisonedóA look behind the AltaróThe "Age of Reason"óHis Argument against the Bible as a RevelationóChristianity of Paine's DayóA Blasphemy Law in Force in MarylandóThe Scotch "Kirk"óHanging of Thomas Aikenhead for Denying the Inspiration of the Scripturesó"Cathedrals and Domes, and Chimes and Chants"óScienceó"He Died in the Land his Genius Defended," INDIVIDUALITY. (1873.) "His Soul was like a Star and Dwelt Apart"óDisobedience one of the Conditions of Progress.óMagellanóThe Monarch and the Hermit-Why the Church hates a ThinkeróThe Argument from Grandeur and Prosperity-Travelers and Guide-boardsóA Degrading SayingóTheological EducationóScotts, Henrys and McKnightsóThe Church the Great RobberóCorrupting the Reason of ChildrenóMonotony of Acquiescence: For God's sake, say NoóProtestant Intolerance: Luther and CalvinóAssertion of Individual Independence a Step toward InfidelityóSalute to JupiteróThe Atheistic Bug-Little Religious Liberty in AmericaóGod in the Constitution, Man OutóDecision of the Supreme Court of Illinois that an Unbeliever could not testify in any CourtóDissimulationóNobody in this BedóThe Dignity of a Unit HERETICS AND HERESIES. (1874.) Liberty, a Word without which all other Words are VainóThe Church, the Bible, and PersecutionóOver the wild Waves of War rose and fell the Banner of Jesus ChristóHighest Type of the Orthodox ChristianóHeretics' Tongues and why they should be Removed before BurningóThe Inquisition EstablishedóForms of TortureóAct of Henry VIII for abolishing Diversity of OpinionóWhat a Good Christian was Obliged to BelieveóThe Church has Carried the Black FlagóFor what Men and Women have been BurnedóJohn Calvin's Advent into the WorldóHis Infamous ActsóMichael ServetusóCastalioóSpread of PresbyterianismóIndictment of a Presbyterian Minister in Illinois for HeresyóSpecificationsóThe Real Bible THE GHOSTS. (1877.) Dedication to Ebon C. IngersollóPrefaceóMendacity of the Religious Pressó"Materialism"óWays of Pleasing the GhostsóThe Idea of Immortality not Born of any BookóWitchcraft and Demon-ologyóWitch Trial before Sir Matthew HaleóJohn Wesley a Firm Believer in Ghostsó"Witch-spots"óLycanthropyóAnimals Tried and ConvictedóThe Governor of Minnesota and the GrasshoppersóA Papal Bull against WitchcraftóVictims of the DelusionóSir William Blackstone's AffirmationóTrials in BelgiumóIncubi and SuccubióA Bishop Personated by the DevilóThe Doctrine that Diseases are caused by GhostsóTreatmentóTimothy Dwight against VaccinationóGhosts as HistoriansóThe Language of EdenóLeibnitz, Founder of the Science of LanguageóCosmas on AstronomyóVagaries of Kepler and Tycho BraheóDiscovery of Printing, Powder, and AmericaóThanks to the InventorsóThe Catholic Murderer and the MeatóLet the Ghosts Go THE LIBERTY OF MAN, WOMAN, AND CHILD. (1877.) Liberty sustains the same Relation to Mind that Space does to MatteróThe History of Man a History of SlaveryóThe Infidel Our Fathers in the good old TimeóThe iron Arguments that Christians UsedóInstruments of TortureóA Vision of the InquisitionóModels of Man's InventionsóWeapons, Armor, Musical Instruments, Paintings, Books, SkullsóThe Gentleman in the Dug-outóHomage to Genius and IntellectóAbraham LincolnóWhat I mean by LibertyóThe Man who cannot afford to Speak his Thought is a Certificate of the Meanness of the Community in which he ResidesóLiberty of WomanóMarriage and the FamilyóOrnaments the Souvenirs of Bondage-The Story of the Garden of EdenóAdami and HevaóEquality of the Sexes-The word "Boss"óThe Cross Man-The Stingy ManóWives who are BeggarsóHow to Spend MoneyóBy the Tomb of the Old NapoleonóThe Woman you Love will never Grow OldóLiberty of ChildrenóWhen your Child tells a LieóDisowning ChildrenóBeating your own Flesh and BloodóMake Home PleasantóSunday when I was a BoyóThe Laugh of a ChildóThe doctrine of Eternal PunishmentóJonathan Edwards on the Happiness of Believing Husbands whose Wives are in HellóThe Liberty of Eating and SleepingóWater in FeveróSoil and Climate necessary to the production of GeniusóAgainst Annexing Santo DomingoóDescent of ManóConclusion ABOUT FARMING IN ILLINOIS. (1877.) To Plow is to Pray; to Plant is to Prophesy, and the Harvest Answers and FulfillsóThe Old Way of FarmingóCooking an Unknown Art-Houses, Fuel, and CropsóThe Farmer's BoyóWhat a Farmer should SellóBeautifying the HomeóAdvantages of Illinois as a Farming StateóAdvantages of the Farmer over the MechanicóFarm Life too Lonely-On Early RisingóSleep the Best DoctoróFashionóPatriotism and Boarding HousesóThe Farmer and the RailroadsóMoney and ConfidenceóDemonetization of Silver-Area of IllinoisóMortgages and InterestóKindness to Wives and ChildrenóHow a Beefsteak should be CookedóDecorations and ComfortóLet the Children SleepóOld Age WHAT MUST WE DO TO BE SAVED? (1880.) PrefaceóThe Synoptic GospelsóOnly Mark Knew of the Necessity of BeliefóThree Christs DescribedóThe Jewish Gentleman and the Piece of BaconóWho Wrote the New Testament?óWhy Christ and the Apostles wrote NothingóInfinite Respect for the Man ChristóDifferent Feeling for the Theological ChristóSaved from What?óChapter on the Gospel of MatthewóWhat this Gospel says we must do to be SavedóJesus and the ChildrenóJohn Calvin and Jonathan Edwards conceived of as Dimpled DarlingsóChrist and the Man who inquired what Good Thing he should do that he might have Eternal LifeóNothing said about BeliefóAn InterpolationóChapter on the Gospel of MarkóThe Believe or be Damned Passage, and why it was writtenóThe last Conversation of Christ with his DisciplesóThe Signs that Follow them that BelieveóChapter on the Gospel of LukeóSubstantial Agreement with Matthew and MarkóHow Zaccheus achieved SalvationóThe two Thieves on the CrossóChapter on the Gospel of JohnóThe Doctrine of Regeneration, or the New BirthóShall we Love our Enemies while God Damns His?óChapter on the CatholicsóCommunication with Heaven through Decayed SaintsóNuns and NunneriesóPenitentiaries of God should be InvestigatedóThe Athanasian Creed expoundedóThe Trinity and its MembersóChapter on the EpiscopaliansóOrigin of the Episcopal ChurchóApostolic Succession an Imported ArticleóEpiscopal Creed like the Catholic, with a few Additional AbsurditiesóChapter on the MethodistsóWesley and WhitfieldóTheir Quarrel about PredestinationóMuch Preaching for Little MoneyóAdapted to New CountriesóChapter on the PresbyteriansóJohn Calvin, MurdereróMeeting between Calvin and KnoxóThe Infamy of CalvinismóDivision in the ChurchóThe Young Presbyterian's Resignation to the Fate of his MotheróA Frightful, Hideous, and Hellish CreedóChapter on the Evangelical AllianceóJeremy Taylor's Opinion of BaptistsóOrthodoxy not DeadóCreed of the AllianceóTotal Depravity, Eternal DamnationóWhat do You Propose?óThe Gospel of Good-fellowship, Cheerfulness, Health, Good Living, JusticeóNo ForgivenessóGod's Forgiveness Does not Pay my Debt to SmithóGospel of Liberty, of Intelligence, of HumanityóOne World at a Timeó"Upon that Rock I Stand" VOLUME II.--LECTURES DETAILED CONTENTS OF VOLUME II. PREFACE. SOME MISTAKES OF MOSES. SOME REASONS WHY ORTHODOXY. MYTH AND MIRACLE. DETAILED CONTENTS OF VOLUME II. SOME MISTAKES OF MOSES. (1879.) PrefaceóI. He who endeavors to control the Mind by Force is a Tyrant, and he who submits is a SlaveóAll I AskóWhen a Religion is FoundedóFreedom for the Orthodox ClergyóEvery Minister an AttorneyóSubmission to the Orthodox and the DeadóBounden Duty of the MinistryóThe Minister Factory at AndoveróII. Free SchoolsóNo Sectarian SciencesóReligion and the SchoolsóScientific HypocritesóIII. The Politicians and the ChurchesóIV. Man and Woman the Highest Possible TitlesóBelief Dependent on SurroundingsóWorship of AncestorsóBlindness Necessary to Keeping the Narrow PathóThe Bible the Chain that BindsóA Bible of the Middle Ages and the Awe it InspiredóV. The PentateuchóMoses Not the AuthoróBelief out of which Grew Religious CeremoniesóEgypt the Source of the Information of MosesóVI. MondayóNothing, in the Light of Raw MaterialóThe Story of Creation BegunóThe Same Story, substantially, Found in the Records of Babylon, Egypt, and IndiaóInspiration Unnecessary to the TruthóUsefulness of Miracles to Fit Lies to FactsóDivision of Darkness and LightóVII. TuesdayóThe Firmament and Some Biblical Notions about itóLaws of Evaporation Unknown to the Inspired WriteróVIII. WednesdayóThe Waters Gathered into SeasóFruit and Nothing to Eat itóFive Epochs in the Organic History of the EarthóBalance between the Total Amounts of Animal and Vegetable LifeóVegetation Prior to the Appearance of the SunóIX. ThursdayóSun and Moon ManufacturedóMagnitude of the Solar OrbóDimensions of Some of the PlanetsóMoses' Guess at the Size of Sun and MoonóJoshua's Control of the Heavenly BodiesóA Hypothesis Urged by MinistersóThe Theory of "Refraction"óRev. Henry MoreyóAstronomical Knowledge of Chinese SavantsóThe Motion of the Earth Reversed by Jehovah for the Reassurance of Ahazó"Errors" Renounced by ButtonóX. "He made the Stars Also"óDistance of the Nearest StaróXI. FridayóWhales and Other Living Creatures ProducedóXII. SaturdayóReproduction InauguratedóXIII. "Let Us Make Man"óHuman Beings Created in the Physical Image and Likeness of GodóInquiry as to the Process AdoptedóDevelopment of Living Forms According to EvolutionóHow Were Adam and Eve Created?óThe Rib StoryóAge of Man Upon the EarthóA Statue Apparently Made before the WorldóXIV. SundayóSacredness of the Sabbath Destroyed by the Theory of Vast "Periods"óReflections on the SabbathóXV. The Necessity for a Good MemoryóThe Two Accounts of the Creation in Genesis I and IIóOrder of Creation in the First AccountóOrder of Creation in the Second AccountóFastidiousness of Adam in the Choice of a HelpmeetóDr. Adam Clark's CommentaryóDr. Scott's GuessóDr. Matthew Henry's AdmissionóThe Blonde and Brunette ProblemóThe Result of Unbelief and the Reward of Faithó"Give Him a Harp"óXVI. The GardenóLocation of EdenóThe Four RiversóThe Tree of KnowledgeóAndover Appealed ToóXVII. The FallóThe SerpentóDr. Adam Clark Gives a Zoological ExplanationóDr. Henry DissentsóWhence This Serpent?óXVIII. DampnessóA Race of GiantsóWickedness of MankindóAn Ark ConstructedóA Universal Flood IndicatedóAnimals Probably Admitted to the ArkóHow Did They Get There?óProblem of Food and ServiceóA Shoreless Sea Covered with Innumerable DeadóDrs. Clark and Henry on the SituationóThe Ark Takes GroundóNew DifficultiesóNoah's SacrificeóThe Rainbow as a MemorandumóBabylonian, Egyptian, and Indian Legends of a FloodóXIX. Bacchus and BabelóInterest Attaching to NoahóWhere Did Our First Parents and the Serpent Acquire a Common Language?óBabel and the Confusion of TonguesóXX. Faith in FilthóImmodesty of Biblical DictionóXXI. The HebrewsóGod's Promises to AbrahamóThe Sojourning of Israel in EgyptóMarvelous IncreaseóMoses and AaronóXXII. The PlaguesóCompetitive Miracle WorkingóDefeat of the Local MagiciansóXXIII. The Flight Out of EgyptóThree Million People in a DesertóDestruction of Pharaoh ana His HostóMannaóA Superfluity of QuailsóRev. Alexander Cruden's CommentaryóHornets as Allies of the IsraelitesóDurability of the Clothing of the Jewish PeopleóAn Ointment MonopolyóConsecration of PriestsóThe Crime of Becoming a MotheróThe Ten CommandmentsóMedical Ideas of JehovahóCharacter of the God of the PentateuchóXXIV. Confess and AvoidóXXV. "Inspired" SlaveryóXXVI. "Inspired" Marriage-XXVII. "Inspired" War-XXVIII. "Inspired" Religious LibertyóXXIX. Conclusion. SOME REASONS WHY. (1881.) IóReligion makes EnemiesóHatred in the Name of Universal BenevolenceóNo Respect for the Rights of BarbariansóLiteral Fulfillment of a New Testament ProphecyóII. Duties to GodóCan we Assist God?óAn Infinite Personality an Infinite Impossibility-Ill. InspirationóWhat it Really IsóIndication of ClamsóMultitudinous Laughter of the SeaóHorace Greeley and the Mammoth TreesóA Landscape Compared to a Table-clothóThe Supernatural is the DeformedóInspiration in the Man as well as in the BookóOur Inspired BibleóIV. God's Experiment with the JewsóMiracles of One Religion never astonish the Priests of Anotheró"I am a Liar Myself"óV. Civilized CountriesóCrimes once regarded as Divine InstitutionsóWhat the Believer in the Inspiration of the Bible is Compelled to SayóPassages apparently written by the DevilóVI. A Comparison of BooksóAdvancing a Cannibal from Missionary to MuttonóContrast between the Utterances of Jehovah and those of Reputable HeathenóEpictetus, Cicero, Zeno, Senecaóthe Hindu, Antoninus, Marcus AureliusóThe AvestaóVII. MonotheismóEgyptians before Moses taught there was but One God and Married but One WifeóPersians and Hindoos had a Single Supreme DeityóRights of Roman WomenóMarvels of Art achieved without the Assistance of HeavenóProbable Action of the Jewish Jehovah incarnated as ManóVIII. The New TestamentóDoctrine of Eternal Pain brought to LightóDiscrepanciesóHuman Weaknesses cannot be Predicated of Divine WisdomóWhy there are Four Gospels according to IrenÊusóThe AtonementóRemission of Sins under the Mosaic DispensationóChristians say, "Charge it"óGod's Forgiveness does not Repair an InjuryóSuffering of Innocence for the GuiltyóSalvation made Possible by Jehovah's Failure to Civilize the JewsóNecessity of Belief not taught in the Synoptic GospelsóNon-resistance the Offspring of WeaknessóIX. Christ's MissionóAll the Virtues had been Taught before his AdventóPerfect and Beautiful Thoughts of his Pagan PredecessorsóSt. Paul Contrasted with Heathen Writersó"The Quality of Mercy"óX. Eternal PainóAn Illustration of Eternal PunishmentóCaptain Kreuger of the Barque TigeróXI. Civilizing Influence of the BibleóIts Effects on the JewsóIf Christ was God, Did he not, in his Crucifixion, Reap what he had Sown?óNothing can add to the Misery of a Nation whose King is Jehovah ORTHODOXY. (1884.) Orthodox Religion Dying OutóReligious Deaths and BirthsóThe Religion of ReciprocityóEvery Language has a CemeteryóOrthodox Institutions Survive through the Money invested in themó"Let us tell our Real Names"óThe Blows that have Shattered the Shield and Shivered the Lance of SuperstitionóMohammed's Successful Defence of the Sepulchre of ChristóThe Destruction of ArtóThe Discovery of AmericaóAlthough he made it himself, the Holy Ghost was Ignorant of the Form of this EarthóCopernicus and KepleróSpecial ProvidenceóThe Man and the Ship he did not TakeóA Thanksgiving Proclamation ContradictedóCharles DarwinóHenry Ward BeecheróThe CreedsóThe Latest CreedóGod as a GovernoróThe Love of GodóThe Fall of ManóWe are Bound by Representatives without a Chance to Vote against ThemóThe AtonementóThe Doctrine of Depravity a Libel on the Human RaceóThe Second BirthóA Unitarian UniversalistóInspiration of the ScripturesóGod a Victim of his own TyrannyóIn the New Testament Trouble Commences at DeathóThe Reign of Truth and LoveóThe Old Spaniard who Died without an EnemyóThe Wars it BroughtóConsolation should be Denied to MurderersóAt the Rate at which Heathen are being Converted, how long will it take to Establish Christ's Kingdom on Earth?óThe ResurrectionóThe Judgment DayóPious Evasionsó"We shall not Die, but we shall all be Hanged"ó"No Bible, no Civilization" Miracles of the New TestamentóNothing Written by Christ or his ContemporariesóGenealogy of JesusóMore MiraclesóA Master of DeathóImprobable that he would be CrucifiedóThe Loaves and FishesóHow did it happen that the Miracles Convinced so Few?óThe ResurrectionóThe AscensionóWas the Body SpiritualóParting from the DisciplesóCasting out DevilsóNecessity of BeliefóGod should be consistent in the Matter of forgiving EnemiesóEternal PunishmentóSome Good Men who are DamnedóAnother ObjectionóLove the only Bow on Life's dark Cloudó"Now is the accepted Time"óRather than this Doctrine of Eternal Punishment Should be TrueóI would rather that every Planet should in its Orbit wheel a barren StaróWhat I BelieveóImmortalityóIt existed long before MosesóConsolationóThe Promises are so Far Away, and the Dead are so NearóDeath a Wall or a DooróA FableóOrpheus and Eurydice. MYTH AND MIRACLE. (1885.) I. Happiness the true End and Aim of LifeóSpiritual People and their LiteratureóShakespeare's Clowns superior to Inspired WritersóBeethoven's Sixth Symphony Preferred to the Five Books of MosesóVenus of Milo more Pleasing than the Presbyterian CreedóII. Religions Naturally ProducedóPoets the Myth-makersóThe Sleeping BeautyóOrpheus and EurydiceóRed Riding HoodóThe Golden AgeóElysian FieldsóThe Flood MythóMyths of the SeasonsóIII. The Sun-godóJonah, Buddha, Chrisnna, Horus, ZoroasteróDecember 25th as a Birthday of GodsóChrist a Sun-GodóThe Cross a Symbol of the Life to ComeóWhen Nature rocked the Cradle of the Infant WorldóIV. Difference between a Myth and a MiracleóRaising the Dead, Past and PresentóMiracles of JehovahóMiracles of ChristóEverything Told except the TruthóThe Mistake of the WorldóV. Beginning of InvestigationóThe Stars as Witnesses against SuperstitionóMartyrdom of BrunoóGeologyóSteam and ElectricityóNature forever the SameóPersistence of ForceóCathedral, Mosque, and Joss House have the same FoundationóScience the Providence of ManóVI. To Soften the Heart of GodóMartyrsóThe God was SilentóCredulity a ViceóDevelop the Imaginationó"The Skylark" and "The Daisy"óVII. How are we to Civilize the World?óPut Theology out of ReligionóDivorce of Church and StateóSecular EducationóGodless SchoolsóVIII. The New JerusalemóKnowledge of the Supernatural possessed by SavagesóBeliefs of Primitive PeoplesóScience is ModestóTheology ArrogantóTorque-mada and Bruno on the Day of JudgmentóIX. Poison of Superstition in the Mother's MilkóAbility of Mistakes to take Care of ThemselvesóLongevity of Religious LiesóMother's religion pleaded by the CannibalóThe Religion of FreedomóO Liberty, thou art the God of my Idolatry VOLUME III--LECTURES DETAILED CONTENTS OF VOLUME III. SHAKESPEARE ROBERT BURNS.* ABRAHAM LINCOLN VOLTAIRE. LIBERTY IN LITERATURE. THE GREAT INFIDELS.* CONCLUSION. WHICH WAY? ABOUT THE HOLY BIBLE. DETAILED CONTENTS OF VOLUME III. SHAKESPEARE (1891.) I. The Greatest Genius of our WorldóNot of Supernatural Origin or of Royal BloodóIlliteracy of his ParentsóEducationóHis FatheróHis Mother a Great WomanóStratford Unconscious of the Immortal ChildóSocial Position of ShakespeareóOf his Personal PeculiaritiesóBirth, Marriage, and DeathóWhat we Know of HimóNo Line written by him to be FoundóThe Absurd EpitaphóII. Contemporaries by whom he was MentionedóIII. No direct Mention of any of his Contemporaries in the PlaysóEvents and Personages of his TimeóIV. Position of the Actor in Shakespeare's TimeóFortunately he was Not Educated at OxfordóAn IdealistóHis Indifference to Stage-carpentry and PlotóHe belonged to All LandsóKnew the Brain and Heart of ManóAn Intellectual SpendthriftóV. The Baconian TheoryóVI. Dramatists before and during the Time of ShakespeareóDramatic Incidents Illustrated in Passages from "Macbeth" and "Julius CÊsar"óVII. His Use of the Work of OthersóThe Pontic SeaóA Passage from "Lear"óVIII. Extravagance that touches the InfiniteóThe Greatest Complimentó"Let me not live after my flame lacks oil"óWhere Pathos almost Touches the GrotesqueóIX. An Innovator and IconoclastóDisregard of the "Unities"óNature ForgetsóViolation of the Classic ModelóX. TypesóThe Secret of ShakespeareóCharacters who Act from Reason and MotiveóWhat they Say not the Opinion of ShakespeareóXI. The Procession that issued from Shakespeare's BrainóHis Great WomenóLovable ClownsóHis MenóTalent and GeniusóXII. The Greatest of all PhilosophersóMaster of the Human HeartóLoveóXIII. In the Realm of ComparisonóXIV. Definitions: Suicide, Drama, Death, Memory, the Body, Life, Echo, the World, RumoróThe Confidant of NatureóXV. Humor and PathosóIllustrationsóXVI. Not a Physician, Lawyer, or BotanistóHe was a Man of ImaginationóHe lived the Life of AllóThe Imagination had a Stage in Shakespeare's Brain. ROBERT BURNS. (1878.) Poetry and PoetsóMilton, Dante, PetrarchóOld-time Poetry in ScotlandóInfluence of Scenery on LiteratureóLives that are PoemsóBirth of BurnsóEarly Life and EducationóScotland Emerging from the Gloom of CalvinismóA Metaphysical PeasantryóPower of the Scotch PreacheróFamous Scotch NamesóJohn Barleycorn vs. CalvinismóWhy Robert Burns is LovedóHis ReadingóMade Goddesses of WomenóPoet of Love: His "Vision," "Bonnie Doon," "To Mary in Heaven"óPoet of Home: "Cotter's Saturday Night," "John Anderson, My Jo"óFriendship: "Auld Lang-Syne"óScotch Drink: "Willie brew'd a peck o' maut"óBurns the Artist: The "Brook," "Tam O'Shanter"óA Real Democrat: "A man's a man for a' that"óHis Theology: The Dogma of Eternal Pain, "Morality," "Hypocrisy," "Holy Willie's Prayer"óOn the BibleóA Statement of his ReligionóContrasted with TennysonóFrom Cradle to CoffinóHis Last wordsóLines on the Birth-place of Burns. ABRAHAM LINCOLN. (1894.) I. Simultaneous Birth of Lincoln and DarwinóHeroes of Every GenerationóSlaveryóPrinciple Sacrificed to SuccessóLincoln's ChildhoodóHis first SpeechóA Candidate for the Senate against DouglassóII. A Crisis in the Affairs of the RepublicóThe South Not Alone Responsible for SlaveryóLincoln's Prophetic WordsóNominated for President and Elected in Spite of his FitnessóIII. Secession and Civil WaróThe Thought uppermost in his MindóIV. A Crisis in the NorthóProposition to Purchase the SlavesóV. The Proclamation of EmancipationóHis Letter to Horace GreeleyóWaited on by ClergymenóVI. Surrounded by EnemiesóHostile Attitude of Gladstone, Salisbury, Louis Napoleon, and the VaticanóVII. Slavery the Perpetual Stumbling-blockóConfiscationóVIII. His Letter to a Republican Meeting in IllinoisóIts EffectóIX. The Power of His PersonalityóThe Embodiment of MercyóUse of the Pardoning PoweróX. The Vallandigham AffairóThe Horace Greeley IncidentóTriumphs of HumoróXI. Promotion of General HookeróA Prophecy and its FulfillmentóXII.óStates Rights vs. Territorial IntegrityóXIII. His Military GeniusóThe Foremost Man in all the World: and then the Horror CameóXIV. Strange Mingling of Mirth and TearsóDeformation of Great Historic CharactersóWashington now only a Steel EngravingóLincoln not a TypeóVirtues Necessary in a New CountryóLaws of Cultivated SocietyóIn the Country is the Idea of HomeóLincoln always a PupilóA Great LawyeróMany-sidedóWit and HumoróAs an OratoróHis Speech at Gettysburg contrasted with the Oration of Edward EverettóApologetic in his KindnessóNo Official RobesóThe gentlest Memory of our World. VOLTAIRE. (1894.) I. Changes wrought by TimeóThrone and Altar Twin VulturesóThe King and the PriestóWhat is Greatness?óEffect of Voltaire's Name on Clergyman and PriestóBorn and BaptizedóState of France in 1694óThe Church at the HeadóEfficacy of Prayers and Dead SaintsóBells and Holy WateróPrevalence of Belief in Witches, Devils, and FiendsóSeeds of the Revolution Scattered by Noble and PriestóCondition in EnglandóThe Inquisition in full Control in SpainóPortugal and Germany burning WomenóItaly Prostrate beneath the Priests, the Puritans in America persecuting Quakers, and stealing ChildrenóII. The Days of YouthóHis EducationóChooses Literature as a Profession and becomes a DiplomatóIn Love and DisinheritedóUnsuccessful Poem CompetitionóJansenists and MolinistsóThe Bull UnigenitusóExiled to TulleóSent to the BastileóExiled to EnglandóAcquaintances made thereóIII. The Morn of ManhoodóHis Attention turned to the History of the ChurchóThe "Triumphant Beast" AttackedóEurope Filled with the Product of his BrainóWhat he MockedóThe Weapon of RidiculeóHis TheologyóHis "Retractions"óWhat Goethe said of VoltaireóIV. The Scheme of NatureóHis belief in the Optimism of Pope Destroyed by the Lisbon EarthquakeóV. His HumanityóCase of Jean CalasóThe Sirven FamilyóThe Espenasse CaseóCase of Chevalier de la Barre and D'EtallondeóVoltaire Abandons FranceóA Friend of EducationóAn AbolitionistóNot a SaintóVI. The ReturnóHis ReceptionóHis DeathóBurial at Romilli-on-the-SeineóVII. The Death-bed ArgumentóSerene Demise of the InfamousóGod has no Time to defend the Good and protect the PureóEloquence of the Clergy on the Death-bed SubjectóThe Second ReturnóThroned upon the BastileóThe Grave Desecrated by PriestsóVoltaire. A Testimonial to Walt WhitmanóLet us put Wreaths on the Brows of the LivingóLiterary Ideals of the American People in 1855ó"Leaves of Grass"óIts reception by the Provincial PrudesóThe Religion of the BodyóAppeal to Manhood and WomanhoodóBooks written for the MarketóThe Index ExpurgatoriusóWhitman a believer in DemocracyóIndividualityóHumanityóAn Old-time Sea-fightóWhat is Poetry?óRhyme a Hindrance to ExpressionóRhythm the Comrade of the PoeticóWhitman's Attitude toward ReligionóPhilosophyóThe Two Poemsó"A Word Out of the Sea"ó"When Lilacs Last in the Door"ó"A Chant for Death"ó The History of Intellectual Progress is written in the Lives of InfidelsóThe King and the PriestóThe Origin of God and Heaven, of the Devil and HellóThe Idea of Hell born of Ignorance, Brutality, Cowardice, and RevengeóThe Limitations of our AncestorsóThe Devil and GodóEgotism of BarbariansóThe Doctrine of Hell not an Exclusive Possession of ChristianityóThe Appeal to the CemeteryóReligion and Wealth, Christ and PovertyóThe "Great" not on the Side of Christ and his DisciplesóEpitaphs as Battle-criesóSome Great Men in favor of almost every SectóMistakes and Superstitions of Eminent MenóSacred BooksóThe Claim that all Moral Laws came from God through the JewsóFearóMartyrdomóGod's Ways toward MenóThe Emperor ConstantineóThe Death TestóTheological Comity between Protestants and CatholicsóJulianóA childish Fable still BelievedóBrunoóHis Crime, his Imprisonment and LIBERTY IN LITERATURE. (1890.) "Old Age"ó"Leaves of Grass" THE GREAT INFIDELS. (1881.) MartyrdomóThe First to die for Truth without Expectation of RewardóThe Church in the Time of VoltaireóVoltaireóDiderotóDavid HumeóBenedict SpinozaóOur InfidelsóThomas PaineóConclusion. WHICH WAY? (1884.) I. The Natural and the SupernaturalóLiving for the Benefit of your Fellow-Man and Living for GhostsóThe Beginning of DoubtóTwo Philosophies of LifeóTwo Theories of GovernmentóII. Is our God superior to the Gods of the Heathen?óWhat our God has doneóIII. Two Theories about the Cause and Cure of DiseaseóThe First PhysicianóThe Bones of St. Anne Exhibited in New YorkóArchbishop Corrigan and Cardinal Gibbons Countenance a Theological FraudóA Japanese StoryóThe Monk and the Miraculous Cures performed by the Bones of a Donkey represented as those of a SaintóIV.óTwo Ways of accounting for Sacred Books and ReligionsóV-Two Theories about MoralsóNothing Miraculous about MoralityóThe Test of all ActionsóVI. Search for the ImpossibleóAlchemyó"Perpetual Motion"óAstrologyóFountain of Perpetual YouthóVII. "Great Men" and the Superstitions in which they have BelievedóVIII. Follies and Imbecilities of Great MenóWe do not know what they Thought, only what they SaidóNames of Great UnbelieversóMost Men Controlled by their SurroundingsóIX. Living for God in Switzerland, Scotland, New EnglandóIn the Dark AgesóLet us Live for ManóX. The Narrow Road of SuperstitionóThe Wide and Ample WayóLet us Squeeze the Orange DryóThis Was, This Is, This Shall Be. ABOUT THE HOLY BIBLE. (1894.) The Truth about the Bible Ought to be ToldóI. The Origin of the BibleóEstablishment of the Mosaic CodeóMoses not the Author of the PentateuchóSome Old Testament Books of Unknown OriginóII. Is the Old Testament Inspired?óWhat an Inspired Book Ought to BeóWhat the Bible IsóAdmission of Orthodox Christians that it is not Inspired as to ScienceóThe Enemy of ArtóIII. The Ten CommandmentsóOmissions and RedundanciesóThe Story of AchanóThe Story of ElishaóThe Story of DanielóThe Story of JosephóIV. What is it all Worth?óNot True, and ContradictoryóIts Myths Older than the PentateuchóOther Accounts of the Creation, the Fall, etc.óBooks of the Old Testament Named and CharacterizedóV. Was Jehovah a God of Love?óVI. Jehovah's AdministrationóVII. The New TestamentóMany Other Gospels besides our FouróDisagreementsóBelief in DevilsóRaising of the DeadóOther MiraclesóWould a real Miracle-worker have been Crucified?óVIII. The Philosophy of ChristóLove of EnemiesóImprovidenceóSelf-MutilationóThe Earth as a FootstoolóJusticeóA Bringer of WaróDivision of FamiliesóIX. Is Christ our Example?óX. Why should we place Christ at the Top and Summit of the Human Race?óHow did he surpass Other Teachers?óWhat he left Unsaid, and WhyóInspirationóRejected Books of the New TestamentóThe Bible and the Crimes it has Caused. VOLUME IV.--LECTURES DETAILED CONTENTS OF VOLUME IV. WHY I AM AN AGNOSTIC. THE TRUTH. HOW TO REFORM MANKIND. A THANKSGIVING SERMON. A LAY SERMON. THE FOUNDATIONS OF FAITH. SUPERSTITION. THE DEVIL. PROGRESS. WHAT IS RELIGION? DETAILED CONTENTS OF VOLUME IV. WHY I AM AN AGNOSTIC. (1896.) I. Influence of Birth in determining Religious BeliefóScotch, Irish, English, and Americans Inherit their FaithóReligions of Nations not Suddenly ChangedóPeople who KnewóWhat they were Certain AboutóRevivalsóCharacter of Sermons PreachedóEffect of ConversionóA Vermont Farmer for whom Perdition had no TerrorsóThe Man and his DogóBacksliding and Re-birthóMinisters who were SincereóA Free Will Baptist on the Rich Man and LazarusóII. The Orthodox GodóThe Two DispensationsóThe Infinite HorroróIII. Religious BooksóThe CommentatorsóPaley's Watch ArgumentóMilton, Young, and PollokóIV. Studying AstronomyóGeologyóDenial and Evasion by the ClergyóV. The Poems of Robert BurnsóByron, Shelley, Keats, and ShakespeareóVI. Volney, Gibbon, and Thomas PaineóVoltaire's Services to LibertyóPagans Compared with PatriarchsóVII. Other Gods and Other ReligionsóDogmas, Myths, and Symbols of Christianity Older than our EraóVIII. The Men of Science, Humboldt, Darwin, Spencer, Huxley, HaeckelóIX. Matter and Force Indestructible and UncreatableóThe Theory of DesignóX. God an Impossible BeingóThe Panorama of the PastóXI. Free from Sanctified Mistakes and Holy Lies. THE TRUTH. (1897.) I. The Martyrdom of ManóHow is Truth to be FoundóEvery Man should be Mentally HonestóHe should be Intellectually HospitableóGeologists, Chemists, Mechanics, and Professional Men are Seeking for the TruthóII. Those who say that Slavery is Better than LibertyóPromises are not EvidenceóHorace Greeley and the Cold StoveóIII. "The Science of Theology" the only Dishonest ScienceóMoses and Brigham YoungóMinds Poisoned and Paralyzed in YouthóSunday Schools and Theological SeminariesóOrthodox Slanderers of ScientistsóReligion has nothing to do with CharityóHospitals Built in Self-DefenceóWhat Good has the Church Accomplished?óOf what use are the Orthodox Ministers, and What are they doing for the Good of MankindóThe Harm they are DoingóDelusions they TeachóTruths they Should Tell about the BibleóConclusionsóOur Christs and our Miracles. HOW TO REFORM MANKIND. (1896.) I. "There is no Darkness but Ignorance"óFalse Notions Concerning All Departments of LifeóChanged Ideas about Science, Government and MoralsóII. How can we Reform the World?óIntellectual Light the First NecessityóAvoid Waste of Wealth in WaróIII. Another WasteóVast Amount of Money Spent on the ChurchóIV. Plow can we Lessen Crime?óFrightful Laws for the Punishment of Minor CrimesóA Penitentiary should be a SchoolóProfessional Criminals should not be Allowed to Populate the EarthóV. Homes for All-Make a Nation of HouseholdersóMarriage and Divorce-VI. The Labor QuestionóEmployers cannot Govern PricesóRailroads should Pay PensionsóWhat has been Accomplished for the Improvement of the Condition of LaboróVII. Educate the ChildrenóUseless KnowledgeóLiberty cannot be Sacrificed for the Sake of AnythingóFalse worship of WealthóVIII. We must Work and Wait. A THANKSGIVING SERMON. (1897.) I. Our fathers Ages AgoóFrom Savagery to CivilizationóFor the Blessings we enjoy, Whom should we Thank?óWhat Good has the Church Done?-Did Christ add to the Sum of Useful KnowledgeóThe SaintsóWhat have the Councils and Synods Done?óWhat they Gave us, and What they did NotóShall we Thank them for the Hell Here and for the Hell of the Future?óII. What Does God Do?óThe Infinite Juggler and his PuppetsóWhat the Puppets have DoneóShall we Thank these Gods?óShall we Thank Nature?óIII. Men who deserve our ThanksóThe Infidels, Philanthropists and ScientistsóThe Discoverers and InventorsóMagellanóCopernicusóBrunoóGalileoóKepler, Herschel, Newton, and LaPlaceóLyellóWhat the Worldly have DoneóOrigin and Vicissitudes of the BibleóThe SeptuagintóInvestigating the Phenomena of NatureóIV. We thank the Good Men and Good Women of the PastóThe Poets, Dramatists, and ArtistsóThe StatesmenóPaine, Jefferson, Ericsson, Lincoln. GrantóVoltaire, Humboldt, Darwin. A LAY SERMON. (1886.) Prayer of King LearóWhen Honesty wears a Rag and Rascality a Robe-The Nonsense of "Free Moral Agency "óDoing Right is not Self-denial-Wealth often a Gilded HellóThe Log HouseóInsanity of Getting MoreóGreat Wealth the Mother of CrimeóSeparation of Rich and PooróEmulationóInvention of Machines to Save LaboróProduction and DestitutionóThe Remedy a Division of the LandóEvils of Tenement HousesóOwnership and UseóThe Great Weapon is the BallotóSewing WomenóStrikes and Boycotts of No AvailóAnarchy, Communism, and SocialismóThe Children of the Rich a Punishment for WealthóWorkingmen Not a DangeróThe Criminals a Necessary ProductóSociety's Right to PunishóThe Efficacy of KindnessóLabor is HonorableóMental Independence. THE FOUNDATIONS OF FAITH. (1895.) I. The Old TestamentóStory of the CreationóAge of the Earth and of ManóAstronomical Calculations of the EgyptiansóThe FloodóThe Firmament a FictionóIsraelites who went into EgyptóBattles of the JewsóArea of PalestineóGold Collected by David for the TempleóII. The New TestamentóDiscrepancies about the Birth of ChristóHerod and the Wise MenóThe Murder of the Babes of BethlehemóWhen was Christ bornóCyrenius and the Census of the WorldóGenealogy of Christ according to Matthew and LukeóThe Slaying of ZachariasóAppearance of the Saints at the CrucifixionóThe Death of Judas IscariotóDid Christ wish to be Convicted?óIII. JehovahóIV. The TrinityóThe IncarnationóWas Christ God?óThe Trinity Expoundedó"Let us pray"óV. The Theological ChristóSayings of a Contradictory CharacteróChrist a Devout JewóAn asceticóHis PhilosophyóThe AscensionóThe Best that Can be Said about ChristóThe Part that is beautiful and GloriousóThe Other SideóVI. The Scheme of RedemptionóVII. BeliefóEternal PainóNo Hope in Hell, Pity in Heaven, or Mercy in the Heart of GodóVIII. Conclusion. SUPERSTITION. (1898.) I. What is Superstition?óPopular Beliefs about the Significance of Signs, Lucky and Unlucky Numbers, Days, Accidents, Jewels, etc.óEclipses, Earthquakes, and Cyclones as OmensóSigns and Wonders of the HeavensóEfficacy of Bones and Rags of SaintsóDiseases and DevilsóII. WitchcraftóNecromancersóWhat is a Miracle?óThe Uniformity of NatureóIII. Belief in the Existence of Good Spirits or AngelsóGod and the DevilóWhen Everything was done by the SupernaturalóIV. All these Beliefs now Rejected by Men of IntelligenceóThe Devil's Success Made the Coming of Christ a Necessityó"Thou shalt not Suffer a Witch to Live"óSome Biblical AngelsóVanished VisionsóV. Where are Heaven and Hell?óPrayers Never AnsweredóThe Doctrine of DesignóWhy Worship our Ignorance?óWould God Lead us into Temptation?óPresident McKinley's Thanks giving for the Santiago VictoryóVI. What Harm Does Superstition Do?óThe Heart Hardens and the Brain SoftensóWhat Superstition has Done and TaughtóFate of SpainóOf Portugal, Austria, GermanyóVII. Inspired BooksóMysteries added to by the Explanations of TheologiansóThe Inspired Bible the Greatest Curse of ChristendomóVIII. Modifications of JehovahóChanging the BibleóIX. Centuries of DarknessóThe Church TriumphantóWhen Men began to ThinkóX. Possibly these Superstitions are True, but We have no EvidenceóWe Believe in the NaturalóScience is the Real Redeemer. THE DEVIL. (1899.) I. If the Devil should Die, would God Make Another?óHow was the Idea of a Devil ProducedóOther Devils than OursóNatural Origin of these MonstersóII. The Atlas of Christianity is The DevilóThe Devil of the Old TestamentóThe Serpent in Edenó"Personifications" of EvilóSatan and JobóSatan and DavidóIII. Take the Devil from the Drama of Christianity and the Plot is GoneóJesus Tempted by the Evil OneóDemoniac PossessionóMary MagdaleneóSatan and JudasóIncubi and SuccubióThe Apostles believed in Miracles and MagicóThe Pool of BethesdaóIV. The Evidence of the ChurchóThe Devil was forced to Father the Failures of GodóBelief of the Fathers of the Church in DevilsóExorcism at the Baptism of an Infant in the Sixteenth CenturyóBelief in Devils made the Universe a Madhouse presided over by an Insane GodóV. Personifications of the DevilóThe Orthodox Ostrich Thrusts his Head into the SandóIf Devils are Personifications so are all the Other Characters of the BibleóVI. Some Queries about the Devil, his Place of Residence, his Manner of Living, and his Object in LifeóInterrogatories to the ClergyóVII. The Man of Straw the Master of the Orthodox MinistersóHis recent AccomplishmentsóVIII. Keep the Devils out of ChildrenóIX. Conclusion.óDeclaration of the Free. PROGRESS. (1860-64.) The Prosperity of the World depends upon its WorkersóVeneration for the AncientóCredulity and Faith of the Middle AgesóPenalty for Reading the Scripture in the Mother TongueóUnjust, Bloody, and Cruel LawsóThe Reformers too were PersecutorsóBigotry of Luther and KnoxóPersecution of CastalioóMontaigne against Torture in Franceó"Witchcraft" (chapter on)óConfessed WizardsóA Case before Sir Matthew HaleóBelief in LycanthropyóAnimals Tried and ExecutedóAnimals received as WitnessesóThe Corsned or Morsel of ExecutionóKepler an AstrologeróLuther's Encounter with the DevilóMathematician Stoefflers, Astronomical Prediction of a FloodóHistories Filled with FalsehoodóLegend about the Daughter of Pharaoh invading Scotland and giving the Country her nameóA Story about MohammedóA History of the Britains written by ArchdeaconsóIngenuous Remark of EusebiusóProgress in the Mechanic ArtsóEngland at the beginning of the Eighteenth CenturyóBarbarous PunishmentsóQueen Elizabeth's Order Concerning Clergymen and Servant GirlsóInventions of Watt, Arkwright, and OthersóSolomon's DeprivationsóLanguage (chapter on)óBelief that the Hebrew was of ParadiseóGeography (chapter on)óThe Works of CosmasóPrinting InventedóChurch's Opposition to BooksóThe InquisitionóThe Reformationó"Slavery" (chapter on)óVoltaire's Remark on Slavery as a ContractóWhite Slaves in Greece, Rome, England, Scotland, and FranceóFree minds make Free BodiesóCauses of the Abolition of White Slavery in EuropeóThe French RevolutionóThe African Slave Trade, its Beginning and EndóLiberty Triumphed (chapter head)óAbolition of Chattel SlaveryóConclusion. WHAT IS RELIGION? (1899.) I. Belief in God and SacrificeóDid an Infinite God Create the Children of Men and is he the Governor of the Universe?óII. If this God Exists, how do we Know he is Good?óShould both the Inferior and the Superior thank God for their Condition?óIII. The Power that Works for RighteousnessóWhat is this Power?óThe Accumulated Experience of the World is a Power Working for Good?óLove the Commencement of the Higher VirtuesóIV. What has our Religion Done?óWould Christians have been Worse had they Adopted another Faith?óV. How Can Mankind be Reformed Without Religion?óVI. The Four Corner-stones of my TheoryóVII. Matter and Force EternalóLinks in the Chain of EvolutionóVIII. ReformóThe Gutter as a NurseryóCan we Prevent the Unfit from Filling the World with their Children?óScience must make Woman the Owner and Mistress of HerselfóMorality Born of IntelligenceóIX. Real Religion and Real Worship. VOLUME V.--DISCUSSIONS DETAILED CONTENTS OF VOLUME V. PREFACE. INGERSOLL'S INTERVIEWS ON TALMAGE. FIRST INTERVIEW. SECOND INTERVIEW. THIRD INTERVIEW. FOURTH INTERVIEW. FIFTH INTERVIEW, SIXTH INTERVIEW. THE TALMAGIAN CATECHISM. A VINDICATION OF THOMAS PAINE. CONCLUSION. THE OBSERVER'S SECOND ATTACK INGERSOLL'S SECOND REPLY. CONTENTS OF VOLUME V. INGERSOLL'S SIX INTERVIEWS ON TALMAGE. (1882.) PrefaceóFirst Interview: Great Men as Witnesses to the Truth of the GospelóNo man should quote the Words of Another unless he is willing to Accept all the Opinions of that ManóReasons of more Weight than ReputationsóWould a general Acceptance of Unbelief fill the Penitentiaries?ó My CreedóMost Criminals OrthodoxóRelig-ion and Morality not Necessarily AssociatesóOn the Creation of the Universe out of OmnipotenceóMr. Talmage's Theory about the Pro-duction of Light prior to the Creation of the SunóThe Deluge and the ArkóMr. Talmage's tendency to Belittle the Bible MiraclesóHis Chemical, Geological, and Agricultural ViewsóHis Disregard of Good Manners- -Second Interview: An Insulting TextóGod's Design in Creating Guiteau to be the Assassin of GarfieldóMr. Talmage brings the Charge of BlasphemyóSome Real BlasphemersóThe Tabernacle Pastor tells the exact Opposite of the Truth about Col. Ingersoll's Attitude toward the Circulation of Immoral Booksó"Assassinating" GodóMr. Talmage finds Nearly All the Invention of Modern Times Mentioned in the BibleóThe Reverend Gentleman corrects the Translators of the Bible in the Matter of the Rib StoryóDenies that Polygamy is permitted by the Old TestamentóHis De-fence of Queen Victoria and Violation of the Grave of George EliotóExhibits a Christian SpiritóThird Interview: Mr. Talmage's Partiality in the Bestowal of his LoveóDenies the Right of Laymen to Examine the ScripturesóThinks the Infidels Victims of Bibliophobia óHe explains the Stopping of the Sun and Moon at the Command of Joshuaó Instances a Dark Day in the Early Part of the CenturyóCharges that Holy Things are Made Light ofóReaffirms his Confidence in the Whale and Jonah StoryóThe Commandment which Forbids the making of Graven ImagesóAffirmation that the Bible is the Friend of WomanóThe Present Condition of WomanóFourth Interview: Colonel Ingersoll Compared by Mr. Talmage tojehoiakim, who Consigned Writings of Jeremiah to the FlamesóAn Intimation that Infidels wish to have all copies of the Bible Destroyed by FireóLaughter DeprecatedóCol. Ingersoll Accused of Denouncing his FatheróMr. Talmage holds that a Man may be Perfectly Happy in Heaven with His Mother in Hell- -Challenges the Infidel to Read a Chapter from St. JohnóOn the "Chief Solace of the World"óDis- covers an Attempt is being made to Put Out the Light-houses of the Farther ShoreóAffirms our Debt to Christianity for Schools, Hospitals, etc.óDenies that Infidels have ever Done any Goodó Fifth Interview: Inquiries if Men gather Grapes of Thorns, or Figs of Thistles, and is Answered in the NegativeóResents the Charge that the Bible is a Cruel BookóDemands to Know where the Cruelty of the Bible Crops out in the Lives of Christiansó Col. Ingersoll Accused of saying that the Bible is a Collection of Polluted WritingsóMr. Talmage Asserts the Orchestral Harmony of the Scriptures from Genesis to Revelation, and Repudiates the Theory of ContradictionsóHis View of Mankind Indicated in Quotations from his Confession of FaithóHe Insists that the Bible is Scientificó Traces the New Testament to its Source with St. JohnóPledges his Word that no Man ever Died for a Lie Cheerfully and TriumphantlyóAs to Prophecies and PredictionsóAlleged "Prophetic" Fate of the Jewish PeopleóSixth Interview: Dr. Talmage takes the Ground that the Unrivalled Circulation of the Bible Proves that it is InspiredóForgets' that a Scientific Fact does not depend on the Vote of NumbersóNames some Christian MillionsóHis Arguments Characterized as the Poor-est, Weakest, and Best Possible in Support of the Doctrine of Inspira-tionóWill God, in Judging a Man, take into Consideration the Cir-cumstances of that Man's Life?óSatisfactory Reasons for Not Believ- ing that the Bible is inspired. THE TALMAGIAN CATECHISM. The Pith and Marrow of what Mr. Talmage has been Pleased to Say, set forth in the form of a Shorter Catechism. A VINDICATION OF THOMAS PAINE. (1877.) Letter to the New York ObserveróAn Offer to Pay One Thousand Dollars in Gold for Proof that Thomas Paine or Voltaire Died in Terror because of any Religious Opinions Either had Expressedó Proposition to Create a Tribunal to Hear the EvidenceóThe Ob-server, after having Called upon Col. Ingersoll to Deposit the Money, and Characterized his Talk as "Infidel 'Buncombe,'" Denies its Own Words, but attempts to Prove themó Its Memory Refreshed by Col. Ingersoll and the Slander RefutedóProof that Paine did Not Recant - -Testimony of Thomas Nixon, Daniel Pelton, Mr. Jarvis, B. F. Has-kin, Dr. Manley, Amasa Woodsworth, Gilbert Vale, Philip Graves, M. D., Willet Hicks, A. C. Hankinson, John Hogeboom, W. J. Hilton, Tames Cheetham, Revs. Milledollar and Cunningham, Mrs. Hedden, Andrew A. Dean, William Carver,óThe Statements of Mary Roscoe and Mary Hindsdale ExaminedóWilliam Cobbett's Account of a Call upon Mary HinsdaleóDid Thomas Paine live the Life of a Drunken Beast, and did he Die a Drunken, Cowardly, and Beastly Death?óGrant Thorbum's Charges ExaminedóStatement of the Rev. J. D. Wickham, D.D., shown to be Utterly FalseóFalse Witness of the Rev. Charles Hawley, D.D.óW. H. Ladd, James Cheetham, and Mary HinsdaleóPaine's Note to CheethamóMr-Staple, Mr. Purdy, Col. John Fellows, James Wilburn, Walter Morton, Clio Rickman, Judge Herttell, H. Margary, Elihu Palmer, Mr. XV Lovett, all these Testified that Paine was a Temperate ManóWashington's Letter to Paineó Thomas Jefferson'sóAdams and Washing-ton on "Common Sense"ó-James Monroe's Tributeó Quotations from PaineóPaine's Estate and His WillóThe Observer's Second Attack (p. 492): Statements of Elkana Watson, William Carver, Rev. E. F. Hatfield, D.D., James Cheetham, Dr. J. W. Francis, Dr. Manley, Bishop FenwickóIngersoll's Second Reply (p. 516): Testimony Garbled by the Editor of the ObserveróMary Roscoeand Mary Hins- dale the Same PersonóHer Reputation for Veracity- -Letter from Rev. A. W. CornellóGrant Thorburn Exposed by James PartonóThe Observer's Admission that Paine did not RecantóAffidavit of William B. Barnes. VOLUME VI.--DISCUSSIONS DETAILED CONTENTS OF VOLUME VI. THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION; INGERSOLL'S OPENING PAPER THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION, BY JEREMIAH S. BLACK. THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION, BY ROBERT G. INGERSOLL. FAITH OR AGNOSTICISM. THE FIELD-INGERSOLL DISCUSSION. A REPLY TO THE REV. HENRY M. FIELD, D.D. A LAST WORD TO ROBERT G. INGERSOLL LETTER TO DR. FIELD. CONTROVERSY ON CHRISTIANTY COL. INGERSOLL TO MR. GLADSTONE. ROME OR REASON. THE CHURCH ITS OWN WITNESS, By Cardinal Manning. ROME OR REASON: A REPLY TO CARDINAL MANNING. IS DIVORCE WRONG? DIVORCE. IS CORPORAL PUNISHMENT DEGRADING? DETAILED CONTENTS OF VOLUME VI. THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION; INGERSOLL'S OPENING PAPER (1881.) I. Col. Ingersoll's Opening PaperóStatement of the Fundamental Truths of ChristianityóReasons for Thinking that Portions of the Old Testament are the Product of a Barbarous PeopleóPassages upholding Slavery, Polygamy, War, and Religious Persecution not Evidences of InspirationóIf the Words are not Inspired, What Is?óCommands of Jehovah compared with the Precepts of Pagans and StoicsóEpictetus, Cicero, Zeno, Seneca, BrahmaóII. The New TestamentóWhy were Four Gospels Necessary?óSalvation by BeliefóThe Doctrine of the AtonementóThe Jewish System Culminating in the Sacrifice of ChristóExcept for the Crucifixion of her Son, the Virgin Mary would be among the LostóWhat Christ must have Known would Follow the Acceptance of His TeachingsóThe Wars of Sects, the Inquisition, the Fields of DeathóWhy did he not Forbid it All?óThe Little that he RevealedóThe Dogma of Eternal PunishmentóUpon Love's Breast the Church has Placed the Eternal AspóIII. The "Inspired" WritersóWhy did not God furnish Every Nation with a Bible? II. Judge Black's ReplyóHis Duty that of a PolicemanóThe Church not in DangeróClasses who Break out into Articulate BlasphemyóThe SciolistóPersonal Remarks about Col. IngersollóChief-Justice Gibson of Pennsylvania QuotedóWe have no Jurisdiction or Capacity to Rejudge the Justice of GodóThe Moral Code of the BibleóCivil Government of the JewsóNo Standard of Justice without Belief in a GodóPunishments for Blasphemy and Idolatry DefendedóWars of ConquestóAllusion to Col. Ingersoll's War RecordóSlavery among the JewsóPolygamy Discouraged by the Mosaic ConstitutionóJesus of Nazareth and the Establishment of his ReligionóAcceptance of Christianity and Adjudication upon its DivinityóThe Evangelists and their DepositionsóThe Fundamental Truths of ChristianityóPersecution and Triumph of the ChurchóIngersoll's Propositions Compressed and the Compressions AnsweredóSalvation as a Reward of BeliefóPunishment of UnbeliefóThe Second Birth, Atonement, Redemption, Non-resistance, Excessive Punishment of Sinners, Christ and Persecution, Christianity and Freedom of Thought, Sufficiency of the Gospel, Miracles, Moral Effect of Christianity. III. Col. Ingersoll's RejoinderóHow this Discussion Came AboutóNatural LawóThe Design ArgumentóThe Right to Rejudge the Justice even of a GodóViolation of the Commandments by JehovahóReligious Intolerance of the Old TestamentóJudge Black's Justification of Wars of ExterminationóHis Defence of SlaveryóPolygamy not "Discouraged" by the Old TestamentóPosition of Woman under the Jewish System and under that of the Ancientsóa "Policeman's" View of GodóSlavery under Jehovah and in EgyptóThe Admission that Jehovah gave no Commandment against PolygamyóThe Learned and Wise Crawl back in CribsóAlleged Harmony of Old and New TestamentsóOn the Assertion that the Spread of Christianity Proves the Supernatural Origin of the GospelóThe Argument applicable to All ReligionsóCommunications from Angels ana GodsóAuthenticity of the Statements of the EvangelistsóThree Important ManuscriptsóRise of MormonismóAscension of ChristóThe Great Public Events alleged as Fundamental Truths of ChristianityóJudge Black's System of "Compression"ó"A Metaphysical Question"óRight and WrongóJusticeóChristianity and Freedom of ThoughtóHeaven and HellóProduction of God and the DevilóInspiration of the Bible dependent on the Credulity of the ReaderóDoubt of MiraclesóThe World before Christ's AdventóRespect for the Man ChristóThe Dark AgesóInstitutions of MercyóCivil Law. THE FIELD-INGERSOLL DISCUSSION. (1887.) An Open Letter to Robert G. IngersollóSuperstitionsóBasis of ReligionóNapoleon's Question about the StarsóThe Idea of GodóCrushing out HopeóAtonement, Regeneration, and Future RetributionóSocrates and JesusóThe Language of Col. Ingersoll characterized as too SweepingóThe SabbathóBut a Step from Sneering at Religion to Sneering at Morality. A Reply to the Rev. Henry M. Field, D. D.óHonest Differences of OpinionóCharles DarwinóDr. Field's Distinction between Superstition and ReligionóThe Presbyterian God an Infinite TorquemadaóNapoleon's Sensitiveness to the Divine InfluenceóThe Preference of AgassizóThe Mysterious as an ExplanationóThe Certainty that God is not what he is Thought to BeóSelf-preservation the Fibre of SocietyóDid the Assassination of Lincoln Illustrate the Justice of God's Judgments?óImmortalityóHope and the Presbyterian CreedóTo a Mother at the Grave of Her SonóTheological Teaching of ForgivenessóOn Eternal RetributionóJesus and MohammedóAttacking the Religion of OthersóAnanias and SapphiraóThe Pilgrims and Freedom to WorshipóThe Orthodox SabbathóNatural Restraints on ConductóReligion and MoralityóThe Efficacy of PrayeróRespect for Belief of Father and MotheróThe "Power behind Nature"óSurvival of the FittestóThe Saddest Factó"Sober Second Thought." A Last Word to Robert G. Ingersoll, by Dr. FieldóGod not a PresbyterianóWhy Col. Ingersoll's Attacks on Religion are ResentedóGod is more Merciful than ManóTheories about the Future LifeóRetribution a Necessary Part of the Divine LawóThe Case of Robinson CrusoeóIrresistible Proof of DesignóCol. Ingersoll's View of ImmortalityóAn Almighty Friend. Letter to Dr. FieldóThe Presbyterian GodóWhat the Presbyterians ClaimóThe "Incurably Bad"óResponsibility for not seeing Things ClearlyóGood Deeds should Follow even AtheistsóNo Credit in BeliefóDesign Argument that Devours ItselfóBelief as a Foundation of Social OrderóNo Consolation in Orthodox ReligionóThe "Almighty Friend" and the Slave Motheróa Hindu PrayeróCalvinismóChrist not the Supreme Benefactor of the Race. COLONEL INGERSOLL ON CHRISTIANITY. (1888.) Some Remarks on his Reply to Dr. Field by the Hon. Wm. E. GladstoneóExternal Triumph and Prosperity of the ChurchóA Truth Half StatedóCol. Ingersoll's Tumultuous Method and lack of Reverential CalmóJephthah's SacrificeóHebrews xii ExpoundedóThe Case of AbrahamóDarwinism and the ScripturesóWhy God demands Sacrifices of ManóProblems admitted to be InsolubleóRelation of human Genius to Human GreatnessóShakespeare and OthersóChrist and the Family RelationóInaccuracy of Reference in the ReplyóAnanias and SapphiraóThe Idea of ImmortalityóImmunity of Error in Belief from Moral ResponsibilityóOn Dishonesty in the Formation of OpinionóA Plausibility of the Shallowest kindóThe System of ThuggismóPersecution for Opinion's SakeóRiding an Unbroken Horse. Col. Ingersoll to Mr. GladstoneóOn the "Impaired" State of the human ConstitutionóUnbelief not Due to DegeneracyóObjections to the Scheme of RedemptionóDoes Man Deserve only Punishment?ó"Reverential Calm"óThe Deity of the Ancient JewsóJephthah and AbrahamóRelation between Darwinism and the Inspiration of the ScripturesóSacrifices to the InfiniteóWhat is Common Sense?óAn Argument that will Defend every SuperstitionóThe Greatness of ShakespeareóThe Absolute Indissolubility of MarriageóIs the Religion of Christ for this Age?óAs to Ananias and SapphiraóImmortality and People of Low Intellectual DevelopmentóCan we Control our Thought?óDishonest Opinions Cannot be FormedóSome Compensations for Riding an "Unbroken Horse." ROME OR REASON. (1888.) "The Church Its Own Witness," by Cardinal ManningóEvidence that Christianity is of Divine OriginóThe Universality of the ChurchóNatural Causes not Sufficient to Account for the Catholic Churchó-The World in which Christianity AroseóBirth of ChristóFrom St Peter to Leo XIII.óThe First Effect of ChristianityóDomestic Life's Second Visible EffectóRedemption of Woman from traditional DegradationóChange Wrought by Christianity upon the Social, Political and International Relations of the WorldóProof that Christianity is of Divine Origin and PresenceóSt. John and the Christian FathersóSanctity of the Church not Affected by Human Sins. A Reply to Cardinal ManningóI. Success not a Demonstration of either Divine Origin or Supernatural AidóCardinal Manning's Argument More Forcible in the Mouth of a MohammedanóWhy Churches Rise and FlourishóMormonismóAlleged Universality of the Catholic ChurchóIts "inexhaustible Fruitfulness" in Good ThingsóThe Inquisition and PersecutionóNot InvincibleóIts Sword used by SpainóIts Unity not UnbrokenóThe State of the World when Christianity was EstablishedóThe Vicar of ChristóA Selection from Draper's "History of the Intellectual Development of Europe"óSome infamous PopesóPart II. How the Pope SpeaksóReligions Older than Catholicism and having the Same Rites and SacramentsóIs Intellectual Stagnation a Demonstration of Divine Origin?óIntegration and DisintegrationóThe Condition of the World 300 Years AgoóThe Creed of CatholicismóThe "One true God" with a Knowledge of whom Catholicism has "filled the World"óDid the Catholic Church overthrow Idolatry?óMarriageóCelibacyóHuman PassionsóThe Cardinal's Explanation of Jehovah's abandonment of the Children of Men for four thousand YearsóCatholicism tested by PaganismóCanon Law and Convictions had Under ItóRival PopesóImportance of a Greek "Inflection"óThe Cardinal Witnesses. IS DIVORCE WRONG? (1889.) Preface by the Editor of the North American ReviewóIntroduction, by the Rev. S. W. Dike, LL. D.óA Catholic View by Cardinal GibbonsóDivorce as Regarded by the Episcopal Church, by Bishop, Henry C. PotteróFour Questions Answered, by Robert G. Ingersoll. DIVORCE. Reply to Cardinal GibbonsóIndissolubility of Marriage a Reaction from PolygamyóBiblical MarriageóPolygamy Simultaneous and SuccessiveóMarriage and Divorce in the Light of ExperienceóReply to Bishop PotteróReply to Mr. GladstoneóJustice BradleyóSenator DolphóThe argument Continued in Colloquial FormóDialogue between Cardinal Gibbons and a Maltreated WifeóShe Asks the Advice of Mr. GladstoneóThe Priest who Violated his VowóAbsurdity of the Divorce laws of Some States. REPLY TO DR. LYMAN ABBOTT. (1890) Dr. Abbott's EquivocationsóCrimes Punishable by Death under Mosaic and English LawóSeverity of Moses Accounted for by Dr. AbbottóThe Necessity for the Acceptance of ChristianityóChristians should be Glad to Know that the Bible is only the Work of Man and that the New Testament Life of Christ is UntrueóAll the Good Commandments, Known to the World thousands of Years before MosesóHuman Happiness of More Consequence than the Truth about GodóThe Appeal to Great NamesóGladstone not the Greatest StatesmanóWhat the Agnostic SaysóThe Magnificent Mistakes of GenesisóThe Story of JosephóAbraham as a "self-Exile for Conscience's Sake." REPLY TO ARCHDEACON FARRAR. (1890.) Revelation as an Appeal to Man's "Spirit"óWhat is Spirit and what is "Spiritual Intuition"?óThe Archdeacon in Conflict with St. PaulóII. The Obligation to Believe without EvidenceóIII. Ignorant CredulityóIV. A Definition of OrthodoxyóV. Fear not necessarily CowardiceóPrejudice is HonestóThe Ola has the Advantage in an ArgumentóSt. AugustineóJeromeóthe Appeal to CharlemagneóRoger BaconóLord Bacon a Defender of the Copernican SystemóThe Difficulty of finding out what Great Men BelievedóNames Irrelevantly CitedóBancroft on the HessiansóOriginal Manuscripts of the BibleóVI. An Infinite Personality a Contradiction in TermsóVII. A Beginningless BeingóVIII. The Cruelties of Nature not to be Harmonized with the Goodness of a DeityóSayings from the IndianóOrigen, St. Augustine, Dante, Aquinas. IS CORPORAL PUNISHMENT DEGRADING? (1890.) A Reply to the Dean of St. PaulóGrowing Confidence in the Power of KindnessóCrimes against Soldiers and SailorsóMisfortunes Punished as CrimesóThe Dean's Voice Raised in Favor of the Brutalities of the PastóBeating of ChildrenóOf WivesóDictum of Solomon. VOLUME VII.--DISCUSSIONS DETAILED CONTENTS OF VOLUME VII. MY REVIEWERS REVIEWED. MY CHICAGO BIBLE CLASS. TO THE INDIANAPOLIS CLERGY. THE BROOKLYN DIVINES. THE LIMITATIONS OF TOLERATION. A CHRISTMAS SERMON. SUICIDE OF JUDGE NORMILE. IS SUICIDE A SIN? IS AVARICE TRIUMPHANT? A REPLY TO THE CINCINNATI GAZETTE AND CATHOLIC TELEGRAPH. AN INTERVIEW ON CHIEF JUSTICE COMEGYS. A REPLY TO REV. DRS. THOMAS AND LORIMER. A REPLY TO REV. JOHN HALL AND WARNER VAN NORDEN. A REPLY TO THE REV. DR. PLUMB. A REPLY TO THE NEW YORK CLERGY ON SUPERSTITION. DETAILED CONTENTS OF VOLUME VII. MY REVIEWERS REVIEWED. (1877.) Answer to San Francisco ClergymenóDefinition of Liberty, Physical and MentalóThe Right to Compel BeliefóWoman the Equal of ManóThe GhostsóImmortalityóSlaveryóWitchcraftóAristocracy of the AiróUnfairness of Clerical CriticsóForce and MatteróDoctrine of NegationóConfident Deaths of MurderersóChildhood Scenes returned to by the DyingóDeath-bed of VoltaireóThomas PaineóThe First Sectarians Were HereticsóReply to Rev. Mr. GuardóSlaughter of the CanaanitesóReply to Rev. Samuel RobinsonóProtestant PersecutionsóTolerationóInfidelity and ProgressóThe OccidentóCalvinismóReligious EditorsóReply to the Rev. Mr. IjamsóDoes the Bible teach Man to Enslave his Brothers?óReply to California Christian AdvocateóSelf-Government of French People at and Since the RevolutionóOn the Site of the BastileóFrench Peasant's Cheers for Jesus ChristóWas the World created in Six DaysóGeologyóWhat is the Astronomy of the Bible?óThe Earth the Centre of the UniverseóJoshua's MiracleóChange of Motion into HeatóGeography and Astronomy of CosmasóDoes the Bible teach the Existence of that Impossible Crime called Witchcraft?óSaul and the Woman of EndoróFamiliar SpiritsóDemonology of the New TestamentóTemptation of JesusóPossession by DevilsóGadarene Swine StoryóTest of BeliefóBible Idea of the Rights of ChildrenóPunishment of the Rebellious SonóJephthah's Vow and SacrificeóPersecution of JobóThe Gallantry of GodóBible Idea of the Rights of WomenóPaul's Instructions to WivesóPermission given to Steal WivesóDoes the Bible Sanction Polygamy and Concubinage?óDoes the Bible Uphold and Justify Political Tyranny?óPowers that be Ordained of GodóReligious Liberty of GodóSun-Worship punishable with DeathóUnbelievers to be damnedóDoes the Bible describe a God of Mercy?óMassacre CommandedóEternal Punishment Taught in the New TestamentóThe Plan of SalvationóFall and Atonement Moral BankruptcyóOther ReligionsóParsee SectóBrahminsóConfuciansóHeretics and Orthodox. MY CHICAGO BIBLE CLASS. (1879.) Rev. Robert CollyeróInspiration of the ScripturesóRev. Dr. ThomasóFormation of the Old TestamentóRev. Dr. KohleróRev. Mr. HerfordóProf. SwingóRev. Dr. Ryder. TO THE INDIANAPOLIS CLERGY. (1882.) Rev. David WalkóCharacter of JesusóTwo or Three Christs Described in the GospelsóChrist's Change of OpinionsóGospels Later than the EpistlesóDivine Parentage of Christ a Late BeliefóThe Man Christ probably a Historical CharacteróJesus Belittled by his WorshipersóHe never Claimed to be DivineóChrist's OmissionsóDifference between Christian and other Modern CivilizationsóCivilization not Promoted by ReligionóInventorsóFrench and American Civilization: How ProducedóIntemperance and Slavery in Christian NationsóAdvance due to Inventions and DiscoveriesóMissionariesóChristian Nations Preserved by Bayonet and BallóDr. T. B. TayloróOrigin of Life on this PlanetóSir William ThomsonóOrigin of Things UndiscoverableóExistence after DeathóSpiritualistsóIf the Dead ReturnóOur CalendaróChrist and Christmas-The Existence of PainóPlato's Theory of EvilóWill God do Better in Another World than he does in this?óConsolationóLife Not a Probationary StageóRev. D.O'DonaghueóThe Case of Archibald Armstrong and Jonathan NewgateóInequalities of LifeóCan Criminals live a Contented Life?óJustice of the Orthodox God Illustrated. THE BROOKLYN DIVINES. (1883.) Are the Books of Atheistic or Infidel Writers Extensively Read?óIncrease in the Number of InfidelsóSpread of Scientific LiteratureóRev. Dr. EddyóRev. Dr. HawkinsóRev. Dr. HaynesóRev. Mr. PullmanóRev. Mr. FooteóRev. Mr. WellsóRev. Dr. Van DykeóRev. CarpenteróRev. Mr. ReedóRev. Dr. McClellandóMinisters Opposed to DiscussionóWhipping ChildrenóWorldliness as a Foe of the ChurchóThe DramaóHuman LoveóFires, Cyclones, and Other Afflictions as Promoters of SpiritualityóClass DistinctionsóRich and PooróAristocraciesóThe Right to Choose One's AssociatesóChurches Social AffairsóProgress of the Roman Catholic ChurchóSubstitutes for the ChurchesóHenry Ward BeecheróHow far Education is Favored by the SectsóRivals of the PulpitóChristianity Now and One Hundred Years AgoóFrench Revolution produced by the PriestsóWhy the Revolution was a FailureóInfidelity of One Hundred Years AgoóMinisters not more Intellectual than a Century AgoóGreat Preachers of the PastóNew Readings of Old TextsóClerical Answerers of InfidelityóRev. Dr. BakeróFather FransiolaóFaith and ReasonóDemocracy of KindnessóMoral InstructionóMorality Born of Human NeedsóThe Conditions of HappinessóThe Chief End of Man. THE LIMITATIONS OF TOLERATION. (1888.) Discussion between Col. Robert G. Ingersoll, Hon. Frederic R. Coudert, and ex-Gov. Stewart L. Woodford before the Nineteenth Century Club of New YorkóPropositionsóToleration not a Disclaimer but a Waiver of the Right to PersecuteóRemarks of Courtlandt PalmeróNo Responsibility for ThoughtóIntellectual HospitalityóRight of Free SpeechóOrigin of the term "Toleration"óSlander and False WitnessóNobody can Control his own Mind: AnecdoteóRemarks of Mr. CoudertóVoltaire, Rousseau, Hugo, and IngersollóGeneral Woodford's SpeechóReply by Colonel IngersollóA Catholic Compelled to Pay a Compliment to VoltaireóResponsibility for ThoughtsóThe Mexican Unbeliever and his Reception in the Other Country. A CHRISTMAS SERMON. (1891.) Christianity's Message of GriefóChristmas a Pagan FestivalóReply to Dr. BuckleyóCharges by the Editor of the Christian AdvocateóThe Tidings of ChristianityóIn what the Message of Grief ConsistsóFear and FlameóAn Everlasting SiberiaóDr. Buckley's Proposal to Boycott the TelegramóReply to Rev. J. M. King and Rev. Thomas Dixon, Jr. Cana Day be Blasphemed?óHurting Christian feelingsóFor Revenue only What is Blasphemy?óBalaam's Ass wiser than the ProphetóThe UniversalistsóCan God do Nothing for this World?óThe Universe a Blunder if Christianity is trueóThe Duty of a NewspaperóFacts Not SectarianóThe Rev. Mr. PetersóWhat Infidelity Has DoneóPublic School System not ChristianóOrthodox UniversitiesóBruno on OxfordóAs to Public MoralsóNo Rewards or Punishments in the UniverseóThe Atonement ImmoralóAs to Sciences and ArtóBruno, Humboldt, DarwinóScientific Writers Opposed by the ChurchóAs to the Liberation of SlavesóAs to the Reclamation of InebriatesóRum and ReligionóThe Humanity of InfidelityóWhat Infidelity says to the DyingóThe Battle ContinuedóMorality not Assailed by an Attack on ChristianityóThe Inquisition and Religious PersecutionóHuman Nature Derided by ChristianityóDr. DaCostaó"Human Brotherhood" as exemplified by the History of the ChurchóThe Church and Science, Art and LearningóóAstronomy's RevengeóGalileo and KepleróMrs. Browning: Science Thrust into the Brain of EuropeóOur NumeralsóChristianity and LiteratureóInstitution's of LearningóStephen GirardóJames LickóOur ChronologyóHistoriansóNatural PhilosophyóPhilologyóMetaphysical ResearchóIntelligence, Hindoo, EgyptianóInventionsóJohn EricssonóEmancipatorsóRev. Mr. BallouóThe Right of Goa to PunishóRev. Dr. HillieróRev. Mr. HaldemanóGeorge A. LoceyóThe "Great Physician"óRev. Mr. TalmageóRev. J. Benson HamiltonóHow Voltaire DiedóThe Death-bed of Thomas PaineóRev. Mr. HollowayóOriginal SinóRev. Dr. TyleróThe Good Samaritan a HeathenóHospitals and AsylumsóChristian Treatment of the InsaneóRev. Dr. BuckleyóThe North American Review DiscussionóJudge Black, Dr. Field, Mr. GladstoneóCirculation of Obscene LiteratureóEulogy of WhiskeyóEulogy of TobaccoóHuman Stupidity that Defies the GodsóRev. Charles DeemsóJesus a Believer in a Personal DevilóThe Man Christ. SUICIDE OF JUDGE NORMILE. (1892.) Reply to the Western WatchmanóHenry D'ArcyóPeter's Prevarication-Some Excellent Pagans-Heartlessness of a CatholicóWishes do not Affect the JudgmentóDevout RobbersóPenitent MurderersóReverential DrunkardsóLuther's DistichóJudge NormileóSelf-destruction. IS SUICIDE A SIN? (1894.) Col. Ingersoll's First Letter in The New York WorldóUnder what Circumstances a Man has the Right to take his Own LifeóMedicine and the Decrees of GodóCase of the Betrayed GirlóSuicides not CowardsóSuicide under Roman LawóMany Suicides InsaneóInsanity Caused by ReligionóThe Law against Suicide Cruel and IdioticóNatural and Sufficient Cause for Self-destructionóChrist's Death a SuicideóCol. Ingersoll's Reply to his CriticsóIs Suffering the Work of God?óIt is not Man's Duty to Endure Hopeless SufferingóWhen Suicide is JustifiableóThe InquisitionóAlleged Cowardice of SuicidesóPropositions DemonstratedóSuicide the Foundation of the Christian ReligionóRedemption and AtonementóThe Clergy on Infidelity and SuicideóMorality and UnbeliefóBetter injure yourself than AnotheróMisquotation by OpponentsóCheerful View the BestóThe Wonder is that Men endureóSuicide a Sin (Interview in The New York Journal)óCauses of SuicideóCol. Ingersoll Does Not Advise SuicideóSuicides with Tracts or Bibles in their PocketsóSuicide a Sin (Interview in The New York Herald)óComments on Rev. Alerle St. Croix Wright's SermonóSuicide and Sanity (Interview in The York World)óAs to the Cowardice of SuicideóGermany and the Prevalence of SuicideóKilling of Idiots and Defective InfantsóVirtue, Morality, and Religion. IS AVARICE TRIUMPHANT? (1891.) Reply to General Rush Hawkins' Article, "Brutality and Avarice Triumphant"óCroakers and Prophets of EvilóMedical Treatment for Believers in Universal EvilóAlleged Fraud in Army ContractsóCongressional ExtravaganceóRailroad "Wreckers"óHow Stockholders in Some Roads Lost Their MoneyóThe Star-Route TrialsóTimber and Public LandsóWatering StockóThe Formation of TrustsóUnsafe Hotels: European Game and Singing BirdsóSeal FisheriesóCruelty to AnimalsóOur IndiansóSensible and Manly PatriotismóDays of BrutalityóDefence of Slavery by the Websters, Bentons, and ClaysóThirty Years' AccomplishmentóEnnobling Influence of War for the RightóThe Lady ana the BrakemanóAmerican Esteem of Honesty in BusinessóRepublics do not Tend to Official CorruptionóThis the Best Country in the World. A REPLY TO THE CINCINNATI GAZETTE AND CATHOLIC TELEGRAPH. (1878.) Defence of the Lecture on MosesóHow Biblical Miracles are sought to be ProvedóSome Non SequitursóA Grammatical CriticismóChristianity Destructive of MannersóCuvier and Agassiz on Mosaic CosmogonyóClerical Advance agentsóChristian Threats and WarningsóCatholicism the Upas TreeóHebrew Scholarship as a Qualification for Deciding Probababilities óContradictions and Mistranslations of the BibleóNumber of Errors in the ScripturesóThe Sunday Question. AN INTERVIEW ON CHIEF JUSTICE COMEGYS. (1881.) Charged with Blasphemy in the State of DelawareóCan a Conditionless Deity be Injured?óInjustice the only BlasphemyóThe Lecture in DelawareóLaws of that StateóAll Sects in turn Charged with BlasphemyóHeresy Consists in making God Better than he is Thought to BeóA Fatal Biblical PassageóJudge ComegysóWilmington PreachersóStates with Laws against BlasphemyóNo Danger of Infidel MobsóNo Attack on the State of Delaware ContemplatedóComegys a ResurrectionóGrand Jury's Refusal to IndictóAdvice about the Cutting out of Heretics' TonguesóObjections to the Whipping-postóMr. Bergh's BillóOne Remedy for Wife-beating. A REPLY TO REV. DRS. THOMAS AND LORIMER. (1882.) SolemnityóCharged with Being InsincereóIrreverenceóOld Testament Better than the Newó"Why Hurt our Feelings?"óInvoluntary Action of the BrainóSource of our Conceptions of SpaceóGood and BadóRight and WrongóThe Minister, the Horse and the Lord's PrayeróMen Responsible for their ActionsóThe "Gradual" Theory Not Applicable to the OmniscientóPrayer Powerless to Alter ResultsóReligious PersecutionóOrthodox Ministers Made Ashamed of their CreedóPurgatoryóInfidelity and Baptism ContrastedóModern Conception of the UniverseóThe Golden Bridge of Lifeó"The Only Salutation"óThe Test for Admission to Heavenó"Scurrility." A REPLY TO REV. JOHN HALL AND WARNER VAN NORDEN. (1892.) Dr. Hall has no Time to Discuss the subject of Starving WorkersóCloakmakers' StrikeóWarner Van Norden of the Church Extension SocietyóThe Uncharitableness of Organized CharityóDefence of the CloakmakersóLife of the UnderpaidóOn the Assertion that Assistance encourages Idleness and CrimeóThe Man without Pity an Intellectual BeastóTendency of Prosperity to Breed SelfishnessóThousands Idle without FaultóEgotism of RichesóVan Norden's Idea of HappinessóThe Worthy Poor. A REPLY TO THE REV. DR. PLUMB. (1898.) Interview in a Boston PaperóWhy should a Minister call this a "Poor" World?óWould an Infinite God make People who Need a Redeemer?óGospel GossipóChrist's Sayings RepetitionsóThe Philosophy of ConfuciusóRev. Mr. MillsóThe Charge of "Robbery"óThe Divine Plan. A REPLY TO THE NEW YORK CLERGY ON SUPERSTITION. (1898.) Interview in the New York JournalóRev. Roberts. MacArthuróA Personal DevilóDevils who held Conversations with Christ not simply personifications of EvilóThe TemptationóThe "Man of Straw"óChrist's Mission authenticated by the Casting Out of DevilsóSpainóGod Responsible for the Actions of ManóRev. Dr. J. Lewis ParksóRev. Dr. E. F. MoldehnkeóPatience amidst the Misfortunes of OthersóYellow Fever as a Divine AgentóThe Doctrine that All is for the BestóRev. Mr. HamlinóWhy Did God Create a Successful Rival?óA Compliment by the Rev. Mr. BelcheróRev. W. C. BuchananóNo Argument Old until it is AnsweredóWhy should God Create sentient Beings to be Damned?óRev. J. W. CampbellóRev. Henry FrankóRev. E. C.J. Kraeling on Christ and the DevilóWould he make a World like This? VOLUME VIII.--INTERVIEWS INTERVIEWS THE BIBLE AND A FUTURE LIFE MRS. VAN COTT, THE REVIVALIST EUROPEAN TRIP AND GREENBACK QUESTION THE PRE-MILLENNIAL CONFERENCE. THE SOLID SOUTH AND RESUMPTION. THE SUNDAY LAWS OF PITTSBURG.* POLITICAL AND RELIGIOUS. POLITICS AND GEN. GRANT POLITICS, RELIGION AND THOMAS PAINE. REPLY TO CHICAGO CRITICS. THE REPUBLICAN VICTORY. INGERSOLL AND BEECHER.* POLITICAL. RELIGION IN POLITICS. MIRACLES AND IMMORTALITY. THE POLITICAL OUTLOOK. MR. BEECHER, MOSES AND THE NEGRO. HADES, DELAWARE AND FREETHOUGHT. A REPLY TO THE REV. MR. LANSING.* BEACONSFIELD, LENT AND REVIVALS. ANSWERING THE NEW YORK MINISTERS.* GUITEAU AND HIS CRIME.* DISTRICT SUFFRAGE. FUNERAL OF JOHN G. MILLS AND IMMORTALITY.* STAR ROUTE AND POLITICS.* THE INTERVIEWER. POLITICS AND PROHIBITION. THE REPUBLICAN DEFEAT IN OHIO. THE CIVIL RIGHTS BILL. JUSTICE HARLAN AND THE CIVIL RIGHTS BILL. POLITICS AND THEOLOGY. MORALITY AND IMMORTALITY. POLITICS, MORMONISM AND MR. BEECHER FREE TRADE AND CHRISTIANITY. THE OATH QUESTION. WENDELL PHILLIPS, FITZ JOHN PORTER AND BISMARCK. GENERAL SUBJECTS. REPLY TO KANSAS CITY CLERGY. SWEARING AND AFFIRMING. REPLY TO A BUFFALO CRITIC. BLASPHEMY.* POLITICS AND BRITISH COLUMBIA. INGERSOLL CATECHISED. BLAINE'S DEFEAT. BLAINE'S DEFEAT. PLAGIARISM AND POLITICS. RELIGIOUS PREJUDICE. CLEVELAND AND HIS CABINET. RELIGION, PROHIBITION, AND GEN. GRANT. HELL OR SHEOL AND OTHER SUBJECTS. INTERVIEWING, POLITICS AND SPIRITUALISM. MY BELIEF. SOME LIVE TOPICS. THE PRESIDENT AND SENATE. ATHEISM AND CITIZENSHIP. THE LABOR QUESTION. RAILROADS AND POLITICS. PROHIBITION. HENRY GEORGE AND LABOR. LABOR QUESTION AND SOCIALISM. HENRY GEORGE AND SOCIALISM. REPLY TO THE REV. B. F. MORSE.* INGERSOLL ON McGLYNN. TRIAL OF THE CHICAGO ANARCHISTS. THE STAGE AND THE PULPIT. ROSCOE CONKLING. THE CHURCH AND THE STAGE. PROTECTION AND FREE TRADE. LABOR, AND TARIFF REFORM. CLEVELAND AND THURMAN. THE REPUBLICAN PLATFORM OF 1888. JAMES G. BLAINE AND POLITICS. THE MILLS BILL. SOCIETY AND ITS CRIMINALS* WOMAN'S RIGHT TO DIVORCE. SECULARISM. SUMMER RECREATIONóMR. GLADSTONE. PROHIBITION. ROBERT ELSMERE. WORKING GIRLS. PROTECTION FOR AMERICAN ACTORS. LIBERALS AND LIBERALISM. POPE LEO XIII. THE SACREDNESS OF THE SABBATH. THE WEST AND SOUTH. THE WESTMINSTER CREED AND OTHER SUBJECTS. SHAKESPEARE AND BACON. GROWING OLD GRACEFULLY, AND PRESBYTERIANISM. CREEDS. THE TENDENCY OF MODERN THOUGHT. WOMAN SUFFRAGE, HORSE RACING, AND MONEY. MISSIONARIES. MY BELIEF AND UNBELIEF.* MUST RELIGION GO? WORD PAINTING AND COLLEGE EDUCATION. PERSONAL MAGNETISM AND THE SUNDAY QUESTION. AUTHORS. INEBRIETY.* MIRACLES, THEOSOPHY AND SPIRITUALISM. TOLSTOY AND LITERATURE. WOMAN IN POLITICS. SPIRITUALISM. PLAYS AND PLAYERS. WOMAN. STRIKES, EXPANSION AND OTHER SUBJECTS. SUNDAY A DAY OF PLEASURE. THE PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. CLEVELAND'S HAWAIIAN POLICY. ORATORS AND ORATORY.* CATHOLICISM AND PROTESTANTISM. THE POPE, THE A. P. A., AGNOSTICISM WOMAN AND HER DOMAIN. PROFESSOR SWING. SENATOR SHERMAN AND HIS BOOK.* REPLY TO THE CHRISTIAN ENDEAVORERS. SPIRITUALISM. A LITTLE OF EVERYTHING. IS LIFE WORTH LIVINGóCHRISTIAN SCIENCE AND POLITICS. VIVISECTION. DIVORCE. MUSIC, NEWSPAPERS, LYNCHING AND ARBITRATION. A VISIT TO SHAW'S GARDEN. THE VENEZUELAN BOUNDARY DISCUSSION AND THE WHIPPING-POST. COLONEL SHEPARD'S STAGE HORSES.* A REPLY TO THE REV. L. A. BANKS. CUBAóZOLA AND THEOSOPHY. HOW TO BECOME AN ORATOR. JOHN RUSSELL YOUNG AND EXPANSION. PSYCHICAL RESEARCH AND THE BIBLE.* THIS CENTURY'S GLORIES. CAPITAL PUNISHMENT AND THE WHIPPING-POST. EXPANSION AND TRUSTS.* VOLUME IX.--POLITICAL DETAILED CONTENTS OF VOLUME IX. AN ADDRESS TO THE COLORED PEOPLE. SPEECH AT INDIANAPOLIS. CENTENNIAL ORATION. BANGOR SPEECH. COOPER UNION SPEECH, NEW YORK. INDIANAPOLIS SPEECH. CHICAGO SPEECH. EIGHT TO SEVEN ADDRESS. HARD TIMES AND THE WAY OUT. SUFFRAGE ADDRESS. WALL STREET SPEECH. BROOKLYN SPEECH. ADDRESS TO THE 86TH ILLINOIS REGIMENT. DECORATION DAY ORATION. DECORATION DAY ADDRESS. RATIFICATION SPEECH. REUNION ADDRESS. THE CHICAGO AND NEW YORK GOLD SPEECH. DETAILED CONTENTS OF VOLUME IX. AN ADDRESS TO THE COLORED PEOPLE. (1867.) Slavery and its Justification by Law and ReligionóIts Destructive Influence upon NationsóInauguration of the Modern Slave Trade by the Portuguese GonzalesóPlanted upon American SoilóThe Abolitionists, Clarkson, Wilberforce, and OthersóThe Struggle in EnglandóPioneers in San Domingo, Oge and ChevannesóEarly Op-posers of Slavery in AmericaóWilliam Lloyd GarrisonóWendell Phillips, Charles Sumner, John BrownóThe Fugitive Slave LawóThe Emancipation ProclamationóDread of Education in the SouthóAdvice to the Colored People. INDIANAPOLIS SPEECH. (1868.) Suspension of the Writ of Habeas CorpusóPrecedent Established by the Revolutionary FathersóCommittees of Safety appointed by the Continental CongressóArrest of Disaffected Persons in Pennsylvania and DelawareóInterference with ElectionsóResolution of Continental Congress with respect to Citizens who Opposed the sending of Deputies to the Convention of New YorkóPenalty for refusing to take Continental Money or Pray for the American CauseóHabeas Corpus Suspended during the RevolutionóInterference with Freedom of the PressóNegroes Freed and allowed to Fight in the Continental ArmyóCrispus AttacksóAn Abolition Document issued by Andrew JacksonóMajority ruleóSlavery and the RebellionóTribute to General Grant. SPEECH NOMINATING BLAINE. (1876.) Note descriptive of the OccasionóDemand of the Republicans of the United StatesóResumptionóThe Plumed Knight. CENTENNIAL ORATION. (1876.) One Hundred Years ago, our Fathers retired the Gods from PoliticsóThe Declaration of IndependenceóMeaning of the DeclarationóThe Old Idea of the Source of Political PoweróOur Fathers Educated by their SurroundingsóThe PuritansóUniversal Religious Toleration declared by the Catholics of MarylandóRoger WilliamsóNot All of our Fathers in favor of IndependenceóFortunate Difference in Religious ViewsóSecular GovernmentóAuthority derived from the PeopleóThe Declaration and the Beginning of the WaróWhat they Fought ForóSlaveryóResults of a Hundred Years of FreedomóThe Declaration Carried out in Letter and Spirit. BANGOR SPEECH. (1876.) The Hayes CampaignóReasons for Voting the Republican TicketóAbolition of SlaveryóPreservation of the UnionóReasons for Not Trusting the Democratic PartyóRecord of the Republican PartyóDemocrats Assisted the SouthóPaper MoneyóEnfranchisement of the NegroesóSamuel J. TildenóHis Essay on Finance. COOPER UNION SPEECH, NEW YORK. (1876.) All Citizens Stockholders in the United States of AmericaóThe Democratic Party a Hungry OrganizationóPolitical Parties ContrastedóThe Fugitive Slave Law a Disgrace to Hell in its Palmiest DaysóFeelings of the Democracy Hurt on the Subject of ReligionóDefence of Slavery in a Resolution of the Presbyterians, SouthóState of the Union at the Time the Republican Party was BornóJacob ThompsonóThe National DebtóProtection of Citizens AbroadóTammany Hall: Its Relation to the PenitentiaryóThe Democratic Party of New York Cityó"What Hands!"óFree Schools. INDIANAPOLIS SPEECH. (1876.) Address to the Veteran Soldiers of the RebellionóObjections to the Democratic PartyóThe Men who have been DemocratsóWhy I am a RepublicanóFree Labor and Free ThoughtóA Vision of WaróDemocratic Slander of the GreenbackóShall the People who Saved the Country Rule It?óOn FinanceóGovernment Cannot Create MoneyóThe Greenback Dollar a Mortgage upon the CountryóGuarantees that the Debt will be Paid-'The Thoroughbred and the MuleóThe Column of July, ParisóThe Misleading Guide Board, the Dismantled Mill, and the Place where there had been a Hotel, CHICAGO SPEECH. (1876.) The Plea of "Let Bygones be Bygones"óPassport of the Democratic PartyóRight of the General Government to send Troops into Southern States for the Protection of Colored PeopleóAbram S. Hewitt's Congratulatory Letter to the NegroesóThe Demand for Inflation of the CurrencyóRecord of Rutherford B. HayesóContrasted with Samuel J. TildenóMerits of the Republican PartyóNegro and Southern WhiteóThe Superior Manó"No Nation founded upon Injustice can Permanently Stand." EIGHT TO SEVEN ADDRESS. (1877.) On the Electoral CommissionóReminiscences of the Hayes-Tilden Campó Constitution of the Electoral CollegeóCharacteristics of the Membersó Frauds at the Ballot Box Poisoning the Fountain of PoweróReforms SuggestedóElections too FrequentóThe Professional Office-seekeróA Letter on Civil Service ReformóYoung Men Advised against Government ClerkshipsóToo Many Legislators and too Much LegislationóDefect in the Constitution as to the Mode of Electing a PresidentóProtection of Citizens by State and General GovernmentsóThe Dual Government in South CarolinaóEx-Rebel Key in the President's CabinetóImplacables and Bourbons South and Northó"I extend to you each and all the Olive Branch of Peace." HARD TIMES AND THE WAY OUT. (1878.) Capital and LaboróWhat is a Capitalist?óThe Idle and the Industrious ArtisansóNo Conflict between Capital and LaboróA Period of Inflation and SpeculationóLife and Fire Insurance AgentsóBusiness done on CreditóThe Crash, Failure, and BankruptcyóFall in the Price of Real Estate a Form of ResumptionóComing back to RealityóDefinitions of Money ExaminedóNot Gold and Silver but Intelligent Labor the Measure of ValueóGovernment cannot by Law Create WealthóA Bill of Fare not a DinneróFiat MoneyóAmerican Honor Pledged to the Maintenance of the GreenbacksóThe Cry against Holders of BondsóCriminals and Vagabonds to be supportedóDuty of Government to Facilitate EnterpriseóMore Men must Cultivate the SoilóGovernment Aid for the Overcoming of Obstacles too Great for Individual EnterpriseóThe Palace Builders the Friends of LaboróExtravagance the best Form of CharityóUseless to Boost a Man who is not ClimbingóThe Reasonable Price for LaboróThe Vagrant and his strange and winding PathóWhat to tell the Working Men. SUFFRAGE ADDRESS. (1880.) The Right to VoteóAll Women who desire the Suffrage should have ItóShall the People of the District of Columbia Manage their Own AffairsóTheir Right to a Representative in Congress and an Electoral VoteóAnomalous State of Affairs at the Capital of the RepublicóNot the Wealthy and Educated alone should GovernóThe Poor as Trustworthy as the RichóStrict Registration Laws Needed. WALL STREET SPEECH. (1880.) Obligation of New York to Protect the Best Interests of the CountryóTreason and Forgery of the Democratic Party in its Appeal to Sword and PenóThe One Republican in the Penitentiary of MaineóThe Doctrine of State SovereigntyóProtection for American Brain and MuscleóHancock on the TariffóA Forgery (the Morey letter) Committed and upheldóThe Character of James A. Garfield. BROOKLYN SPEECH. (1880.) Introduced by Henry Ward Beecher (note)óSome Patriotic DemocratsóFreedom of Speech North and SouthóAn Honest Ballotó ADDRESS TO THE 86TH ILLINOIS REGIMENT. DECORATION DAY ORATION. DECORATION DAY ADDRESS. RATIFICATION SPEECH. REUNION ADDRESS. THE CHICAGO AND NEW YORK GOLD SPEECH. VOLUME X.--LEGAL DETAILED CONTENTS OF VOLUME X. ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE MUNN TRIAL. CLOSING ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE FIRST STAR ROUTE TRIAL. OPENING ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE SECOND STAR ROUTE TRIAL. CLOSING ADDRESS IN SECOND STAR ROUTE TRIAL ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE. ARGUMENT BEFORE THE VICE-CHANCELLOR IN THE RUSSELL CASE. DETAILED CONTENTS OF VOLUME X. ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE MUNN TRIAL. Demoralization caused by AlcoholóNote from the Chicago TimesóPrejudiceóReview of the Testimony of Jacob RehmóPerjury CharacterizedóThe Defendant and the Offence Charged (p. 21)óTestimony of Golsen ReviewedóRehm's Testimony before the Grand JuryóGood Character (p. 29)óSuspicion not Evidence. CLOSING ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE FIRST STAR ROUTE TRIAL. Note from the Washington CapitalóThe Assertion Denied that we are a Demoralized Country and that our Country is Distinguished among the Nations only for CorruptionóDuties of Jurors and Duties of LawyersóSection under which the Indictment is FoundóCases cited to Show that Overt Acts charged and also the Crime itself must be Proved as DescribedóRoutes upon which Indictments are Based and Overt Acts Charged (pp. 54-76)óRoutes on which the Making of False Claims is AllegedóAuthorities on Proofs of Conspiracy (pp. 91-94)óExamination of the Evidence against Stephen W. and John W. Dorsey (pp. 96-117)óThe Corpus Delicti in a Case of Conspiracy and the Acts Necessary to be Done in Order to Establish Conspiracy (pp. 120-123)óTestimony of Walsh and the Confession of RerdellóExtravagance in Mail Carrying (p. 128)óProductiveness of Mail Routes (p. 131)óHypothesis of Guilt and Law of EvidenceóDangerous Influence of SuspicionóTerrorizing the JuryóThe Woman at Her Husband's Side. OPENING ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE SECOND STAR ROUTE TRIAL. Juries the Bulwark of Civil LibertyóSuspicion Not EvidenceóBrief Statement of the CaseóJohn M. Peck, John W. Dorsey, Stephen W. Dorsey, John R. Miner, Mr. (A. E. ) Boone (p.p. 150-156)óThe Clendenning BondsóMiner's, Peck's, and Dorsey's BidsóWhy they Bid on Cheap RoutesóNumber of Routes upon which there are IndictmentsóThe Arrangement between Stephen W. Dorsey and John R. MineróAppearance of Mr. Vaile in the ContractsóPartnership FormedóThe Routes DividedóSenator Dorsey's Course after Getting the RoutesóHis Routes turned over to James W. BosleróProfits of the Business (p. 181)óThe Petitions for More MailsóProductive and Unproductive Post-officesóMen who Add to the Wealth of the WorldóWhere the Idea of the Productiveness of Post routes was HatchedóCost of Letters to Recipients in 1843óThe Overland Mail (p. 190)óLoss in Distributing the Mail in the District of Columbia and Other TerritoriesóPost-office the only Evidence of National BeneficenceóProfit and Loss of Mail CarryingóOrders Antedated, and WhyóRoutes Increased and ExpeditedóAdditional Bonds for Additional TripsóThe Charge that Pay was Received when the Mail was not CarriedóFining on SharesóSubcontracts for Less than the Original ContractsóPay on Discontinued RoutesóAlleged False AffidavitsóRight of PetitionóReviewing the Ground. CLOSING ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE SECOND STAR ROUTE TRIAL. Scheme of the IndictmentóStory of the CaseóWhat Constitutes Fraudulent BiddingóHow a Conspiracy Must be ProvedóThe Hypothesis of Guilt and Law of EvidenceóConversation Unsatisfactory EvidenceóFallibility of MemoryóProposition to Produce Mr. Dorsey's BooksóInterruption of the Court to Decide that Primary Evidence, having Once been Refused, can not afterwards be Introduced to Contradict Secondary EvidenceóA Defendant may not be Presumed into the PenitentiaryóA Decision by Justice FieldóThe Right of PetitionóWas there a Conspiracy?óDorsey's Benevolence (p. 250)óThe Chico Springs LetteróEvidence of Moore ReviewedóMr. Ker's Defective MemoryóThe Informer SystemóTestimony of Rerdell ReviewedóHis Letter to Dorsey (p. 304)óThe Affidavit of Rerdell and DorseyóPetitions for Faster TimeóUncertainty Regarding HandwritingóGovernment Should be Incapable of DeceitóRerdell's withdrawal of the Plea of Not Guilty (p. 362)óInformers, their Immunity and EvidenceóNailing Down the Lid of Rerdell's CoffinóMistakes of Messrs. Ker and Merrick and the CourtóLetter of H. M. Vaile to the Sixth AuditoróMiner's Letter to CareyóMiner, Peck & Co. to Frank A. TuttleóAnswering Points Raised by Mr. Bliss (396 et seq.)óEvidence regarding the Payment of Money by Dorsey to BradyóA. E. Boone's Testimony ReviewedóSecrecy of Contractors Regarding the Amount of their BidsóBoone's Partnership Agreement with DorseyóExplanation of Bids in Different NamesóOmission of Instructions from Proposals (p. 450)óAccusation that Senator Mitchell was the Paid Agent of the DefendantsóAlleged Sneers at Things held SacredóWhat is a Conspiracy?óThe Theory that there was a ConspiracyóDorsey's Alleged InterestóThe Two Affidavits in EvidenceóInquiry of General MilesóWhy the Defendant's Books were not ProducedóTames W. Bosler's Testimony Read (p. 500)óThe Court shown to be Mistaken Regarding a Decision Previously Made (pp. 496-502)óNo Logic in AbuseóCharges against John W. MineróTestimony of A. W. Moore Reviewed-The Verdict PredictedóThe Defendants in the CaseóWhat is left for the Jury to SayóRemarks of Messrs. Henkle and DavidgeóThe Verdict. ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE. Note from the Anaconda StandardóSenator Sander's Warning to the Jury Not to be Enticed by SinnersóEvidence, based on Quality of Handwriting, that Davis did not Write the WillóEvidence of the SpellingóAssertion that the Will was ForgedóPeculiarities of Eddy's HandwritingóHoles in Sconce's Signature and ReputationóHis MemoryóBusiness Sagacity of DavisóHis Alleged ChildrenóDate of his DeathóTestimony of Mr. KnightóInk used in Writing the WillóExpert EvidenceóSpeechlessness of John A. DavisóEddy's Failure to take the StandóTestimony of CarruthersóRelatives of SconceóMary Ann Davis's ConnectionsóThe Family TreeóThe Signature of the WillóWhat the Evidence ShowsóDuty and Opportunity of the Jury. ARGUMENT BEFORE THE VICE-CHANCELLOR IN THE RUSSELL CASE. Antenuptial Waiving of Dower by WomenóA Case from IllinoisóAt What Age Men and Women Cease to Feel the Tender FlameóRussell's Bargain with Mrs. RussellóAntenuptial Contract and Parole AgreementóDefinition of "Liberal Provision "óThe Woman not Bound by a Contract Made in Ignorance of the FactsóContract Destroyed by Deception. VOLUME XI.--MISCELLANY DETAILED CONTENTS OF VOLUME XI. ADDRESS ON THE CIVIL RIGHTS ACT. TRIAL OF C. B. REYNOLDS FOR BLASPHEMY. GOD IN THE CONSTITUTION. A REPLY TO BISHOP SPALDING. CRIMES AGAINST CRIMINALS. A WOODEN GOD. SOME INTERROGATION POINTS. ART AND MORALITY. THE DIVIDED HOUSEHOLD OF FAITH. WHY AM I AN AGNOSTIC? HUXLEY AND AGNOSTICISM. ERNEST RENAN. TOLSTOœ AND "THE KREUTZER SONATA." THOMAS PAINE. THE THREE PHILANTHROPISTS. SHOULD THE CHINESE BE EXCLUDED? A WORD ABOUT EDUCATION. WHAT I WANT FOR CHRISTMAS. FOOL FRIENDS. INSPIRATION THE TRUTH OF HISTORY. HOW TO EDIT A LIBERAL PAPER. SECULARISM. CRITICISM OF "ROBERT ELSMERE," "JOHN WARD, PREACHER," AND "AN AFRICAN FARM." THE LIBEL LAWS REV. DR. NEWTON'S SERMON ON A NEW RELIGION. AN ESSAY ON CHRISTMAS. HAS FREETHOUGHT A CONSTRUCTIVE SIDE? THE IMPROVED MAN. EIGHT HOURS MUST COME. THE JEWS. CRUMBLING CREEDS. OUR SCHOOLS. VIVISECTION. THE CENSUS ENUMERATOR'S OFFICIAL CATECHISM. THE AGNOSTIC CHRISTMAS SPIRITUALITY. SUMTER'S GUN. WHAT INFIDELS HAVE DONE. CRUELTY IN THE ELMIRA REFORMATORY. LAW'S DELAY. THE BIGOTRY OF COLLEGES. A YOUNG MAN'S CHANCES TO-DAY. SCIENCE AND SENTIMENT. SOWING AND REAPING. SHOULD INFIDELS SEND THEIR CHILDREN TO SUNDAY SCHOOL? WHAT WOULD YOU SUBSTITUTE FOR THE BIBLE AS A MORAL GUIDE? GOVERNOR ROLLINS' FAST-DAY PROCLAMATION. A LOOK BACKWARD AND A PROPHECY. POLITICAL MORALITY. A FEW REASONS FOR DOUBTING THE INSPIRATION OF THE BIBLE. DETAILED CONTENTS OF VOLUME XI. ADDRESS ON THE CIVIL RIGHTS ACT. Introduction by Frederick Douglass("Abou Ben Adhem")óDecision of the United States Supreme Court pronouncing the Civil Rights Act UnconstitutionalóLimitations of JudgesóIllusion Destroyed by the Decision in the Dred Scott CaseóMistake of Our Fathers in adopting the Common Law of EnglandóThe 13th Amendment to the Constitution QuotedóThe Clause of the Constitution upholding SlaveryóEffect of this ClauseóDefinitions of a State by Justice Wilson and Chief Justice ChaseóEffect of the Thirteenth AmendmentóJustice Field on Involuntary ServitudeóCivil Rights Act QuotedóDefinition of the Word Servitude by the Supreme CourtóObvious Purpose of the AmendmentóJustice Miller on the 14th AmendmentóCitizens Created by this AmendmentóOpinion of Justice FieldóRights and Immunities guaranteed by the ConstitutionóOpinion delivered by Chief-Justice WaiteóFurther Opinions of Courts on the question of CitizenshipóEffect of the 13th, 14th and 15th Amendmentsó"Corrective" Legislation by CongressóDenial of equal "Social" PrivilegesóIs a State responsible for the Action of its Agent when acting contrary to Law?óThe Word "State" must include the People of the State as well as the Officers of the StateóThe Louisiana Civil Rights Law, and a Case tried under itóUniformity of Duties essential to the CarrieróCongress left Powerless to protect Rights conferred by the ConstitutionóDefinition of "Appropriate Legislation"óPropositions laid down regarding the Sovereignty of the State, the powers of the General Government, etc.óA Tribute to Justice HarlanóA Denial that Property exists by Virtue of LawóCivil Rights not a Question of Social EqualityóConsiderations upon which Social Equality dependsóLiberty not a Question of Social EqualityóThe Superior ManóInconsistencies of the PastóNo Reason why we should Hate the Colored PeopleóThe Issues that are upon Us. TRIAL OF C. B. REYNOLDS FOR BLASPHEMY. ADDRESS TO THE JURY. Report of the Case from the New York Times (note)óThe Right to express OpinionsóAttempts to Rule the Minds of Men by ForceóLiberty the Greatest GoodóIntellectual Hospitality DefinedóWhen the Catholic Church had PoweróAdvent of the ProtestantsóThe Puritans, Quakers. Unitarians, UniversalistsóWhat is Blasphemy?óWhy this Trial should not have Taken PlaceóArgument cannot be put in JailóThe Constitution of New JerseyóA higher Law than Men can MakeóThe Blasphemy Statute Quoted and DiscussedóIs the Statute Constitutional?óThe Harm done by Blasphemy LawsóThe Meaning of this PersecutionóReligions are EphemeralóLet us judge each other by our ActionsóMen who have braved Public Opinion should be HonoredóThe Blasphemy Law if enforced would rob the World of the Results of Scientific ResearchóIt declares the Great Men of to-day to be CriminalsóThe Indictment Read and Commented uponóLaws that go to SleepóObsolete Dogmas the Denial of which was once punished by DeathóBlasphemy CharacterizedóOn the Argument that Blasphemy Endangers the Public PeaceóA Definition of real BlasphemyóTrials for Blasphemy in EnglandóThe case of Abner KneelandóTrue Worship, Prayer, and ReligionóWhat is Holy and SacredóWhat is Claimed in this CaseóFor the Honor of the StateóThe word LibertyóResult of the Trial (note). GOD IN THE CONSTITUTION. The Feudal SystemóOffice and Purpose of our ConstitutionóWhich God shall we Select?óThe Existence of any God a Matter of OpinionóWhat is entailed by a Recognition of a God in the ConstitutionóCan the Infinite be Flattered with a Constitutional Amendment?óThis government is SecularóThe Government of God a FailureóThe Difference between the Theological and the Secular SpiritóA Nation neither Christian nor InfidelóThe Priest no longer a NecessityóProgress of Science and the Development of the Mind. A REPLY TO BISHOP SPALDING. On God in the ConstitutionóWhy the Constitutional Convention ignored the Question of ReligionóThe Fathers MisrepresentedóReasons why the Attributes of God should not form an Organic Part of the Law of the LandóThe Effect of a Clause Recognizing God. CRIMES AGAINST CRIMINALS. The Three Pests of a CommunityóI. Forms of Punishment and TortureóMore Crimes Committed than Prevented by GovernmentsóII. Are not Vices transmitted by Nature?ó111. Is it Possible for all People to be Honest?óChildren of Vice as the natural Product of SocietyóStatistics: the Relation between Insanity, Pauperism, and CrimeóIV. The Martyrs of ViceóFranklin's Interest in the Treatment of PrisonersóV. Kindness as a RemedyóCondition of the Discharged PrisoneróVI. Compensation for ConvictsóVII. Professional CriminalsóShall the Nation take Life?óInfluence of Public Executions on the SpectatorsóLynchers for the Most Part Criminals at HeartóVIII. The Poverty of the Many a perpetual MenaceóLimitations of Land-holding.óIX. Defective Education by our SchoolsóHands should be educated as well as HeadóConduct improved by a clearer Perception of ConsequencesóX. The Discipline of the average Prison Hardening and DegradingóWhile Society cringes before Great Thieves there will be Little Ones to fill the JailsóXI. Our Ignorance Should make us Hesitate. A WOODEN GOD. On Christian and Chinese worshipóReport of the Select Committee on Chinese ImmigrationóThe only true God as contrasted with JossóSacrifices to the "Living God"óMessrs. Wright, Dickey, O'Connor and Murch on the "Religious System" of the American UnionóHow to prove that Christians are better than HeathensóInjustice in the Name of GodóAn honest Merchant the best MissionaryóA Few Extracts from ConfuciusóThe Report proves that the Wise Men of China who predicted that Christians could not be Trusted were not only Philosophers but Prophets. SOME INTERROGATION POINTS. A New Party and its PurposeóThe Classes that Exist in every CountryóEffect of Education on the Common PeopleóWants Increased by IntelligenceóThe Dream of 1776óThe Monopolist and the CompetitoróThe War between the Gould and Mackay CablesóCompetition between MonopoliesóAll Advance in Legislation made by Repealing LawsóWages and Values not to be fixed by LawóMen and MachinesóThe Specific of the Capitalist: EconomyóThe poor Man and Woman devoured by their Fellow-menóSocialism one of the Worst Possible forms of SlaveryóLiberty not to be exchanged for ComfortóWill the Workers always give their Earnings for the Useless?óPriests, Successful Frauds, and Robed Impostors. ART AND MORALITY. The Origin of Man's ThoughtsóThe imaginative Manó"Medicinal View" of PoetryóRhyme and ReligionóThe theological Poets and their Purpose in WritingóMoral Poets and their "Unwelcome Truths"óThe really Passionate are the VirtuousóDifference between the Nude and the NakedóMorality the Melody of ConductóThe inculcation of Moral Lessons not contemplated by Artists or great NovelistsóMistaken ReformersóArt not a SermonóLanguage a Multitude of PicturesóGreat Pictures and Great Statues painted and chiseled with WordsóMediocrity moral from a Necessity which it calls VirtueóWhy Art CivilizesóThe NudeóThe Venus de MiloóThis is Art. THE DIVIDED HOUSEHOLD OF FAITH. The Way in which Theological Seminaries were EndowedóReligious Guide-boardsóVast Interests interwoven with CreedsóPretensions of ChristianityóKepler's Discovery of his Three Great LawsóEquivocations and Evasions of the ChurchóNature's Testimony against the BibleóThe Age of Man on the Earthó"Inspired" Morality of the BibleóMiraclesóChristian DogmasóWhat the church has been Compelled to AbandonóThe Appeal to Epithets, Hatred and Punishmentó"Spirituality" the last Resource of the OrthodoxóWhat is it to be Spiritual?óTwo Questions for the Defenders of Orthodox Creeds. WHY AM I AN AGNOSTIC? Part I. Inharmony of Nature and the Lot of Man with the Goodness and Wisdom of a supposed DeityóWhy a Creator is ImaginedóDifficulty of the Act of CreationóBelief in Supernatural BeingsóBelief and Worship among SavagesóQuestions of Origin and DestinyóProgress impossible without Change of BeliefóCircumstances Determining BeliefóHow may the True Religion be Ascertained?óProsperity of Nations nor Virtue of Individuals Dependent on Religions or GodsóUninspired Books SuperioróPart II. The Christian ReligionóCredulityóMiracles cannot be EstablishedóEffect of TestimonyóMiraculous Qualities of all ReligionsóTheists and NaturalistsóThe Miracle of InspirationóHow can the alleged Fact of Inspiration be Established?óGod's work and Man'sóRewards for Falsehood offered by the Church. HUXLEY AND AGNOSTICISM. Statement by the Principal of King's CollegeóOn the Irrelevancy of a Lack of Scientific KnowledgeóDifference between the Agnostic and the Christian not in Knowledge but in CredulityóThe real name of an Agnostic said to be "Infidel"óWhat an Infidel isó"Unpleasant" significance of the WordóBelief in Christó"Our Lord and his Apostles" possibly Honest MenóTheir Character not InvokedóPossession by evil spiritsóProfessor Huxley's Candor and ClearnessóThe splendid Dream of Auguste ComteóStatement of the Positive PhilosophyóHuxley and Harrison. ERNEST RENAN. His Rearing and his Anticipated BiographyóThe complex Character of the Christ of the GospelsóRegarded as a Man by RenanóThe Sin against the Holy GhostóRenan on the GospelsóNo Evidence that they were written by the Men whose Names they BearóWritten long after the Events they DescribeóMetaphysics of the Church found in the Gospel of JohnóNot Apparent why Four Gospels should have been WrittenóRegarded as legendary BiographiesóIn "flagrant contradiction one with another"óThe Divine Origin of Christ an After-growthóImprobable that he intended to form a ChurchóRenan's LimitationsóHebrew ScholarshipóHis "People of Israel"óHis Banter and Blasphemy. TOLSTOY AND "THE KREUTZER SONATA." Tolstoy's Belief and PhilosophyóHis AsceticismóHis View of Human LoveóPurpose of "The Kreutzer Sonata"óProfound Difference between the Love of Men and that of WomenóTolstoy cannot now found a Religion, but may create the Necessity for another AsylumóThe EmotionsóThe Curious Opinion Dried Apples have of Fruit upon the TreeóImpracticability of selling All and giving to the PooróLove and ObedienceóUnhappiness in the Marriage Relation not the fault of Marriage. THOMAS PAINE. Life by Moncure D. ConwayóEarly Advocacy of Reforms against Dueling and Cruelty to AnimalsóThe First to write "The United States of America"óWashington's Sentiment against Separation from Great BritainóPaine's Thoughts in the Declaration of IndependenceóAuthor of the first Proclamation of Emancipation in AmericaóEstablishment of a Fund for the Relief of the ArmyóH's "Farewell Address"óThe "Rights of Man"óElected to the French ConventionóEfforts to save the Life of the KingóHis Thoughts on ReligionóArrestedóThe "Age of Reason" and the Weapons it has furnished "Advanced Theologians"óNeglect by Gouverneur Morris and WashingtonóJames Monroe's letter to Paine and to the Committee of General SafetyóThe vaunted Religious Liberty of Colonial MarylandóOrthodox Christianity at the Beginning of the 19th CenturyóNew Definitions of GodóThe Funeral of Paine. THE THREE PHILANTHROPISTS. I. Mr. A., the Professional Philanthropist, who established a Colony for the Enslavement of the Poor who could not take care of themselves, amassed a large Fortune thereby, built several churches, and earned the Epitaph, "He was the Providence of the Poor"óII. Mr. B., the Manufacturer, who enriched himself by taking advantage of the Necessities of the Poor, paid the lowest Rate of Wages, considered himself one of God's Stewards, endowed the "B Asylum" and the "B College," never lost a Dollar, and of whom it was recorded, "He Lived for Others." III. Mr. C., who divided his Profits with the People who had earned it, established no Public Institutions, suppressed Nobody; and those who have worked for him said, "He allowed Others to live for Themselves." SHOULD THE CHINESE BE EXCLUDED? Trampling on the Rights of InferiorsóRise of the Irish and Germans to PoweróThe Burlingame TreatyóCharacter of Chinese LaborersóTheir Enemies in the Pacific StatesóViolation of TreatiesóThe Geary LawóThe Chinese Hated for their VirtuesóMore Piety than Principle among the People's RepresentativesóShall we go back to Barbarism? A WORD ABOUT EDUCATION. What the Educated Man KnowsóNecessity of finding out the Facts of Natureó"Scholars" not always Educated Men; from necessaries to luxuries; who may be called educated; mental misers; the first duty of man; university education not necessary to usefulness, no advantage in learning useless facts. WHAT I WANT FOR CHRISTMAS. Would have the Kings and Emperors resign, the Nobility drop their Titles, the Professors agree to teach only What they Know, the Politicians changed to Statesmen, the Editors print only the TruthóWould like to see Drunkenness and Prohibition abolished, Corporal Punishment done away with, and the whole World free. FOOL FRIENDS. The Fool Friend believes every Story against you, never denies a Lie unless it is in your Favor, regards your Reputation as Common Prey, forgets his Principles to gratify your Enemies, and is so friendly that you cannot Kick him. INSPIRATION. Nature tells a different Story to all Eyes and EarsóHorace Greeley and the Big TreesóThe Man who "always did like rolling land"óWhat the Snow looked like to the GermanóShakespeare's different Story for each ReaderóAs with Nature so with the Bible. THE TRUTH OF HISTORY. People who live by LyingóA Case in pointóH. Hodson Rugg's Account of the Conversion of Ingersoll and 5,000 of his FollowersóThe "Identity of Lost Israel with the British Nation"óOld Falsehoods about InfidelsóThe New York Observer and Thomas PaineóA Rascally English EditoróThe Charge that Ingersoll's Son had been ConvertedóThe Fecundity of Falsehood. HOW TO EDIT A LIBERAL PAPER. The Editor should not narrow his Horizon so that he can see only One ThingóTo know the Defects of the Bible is but the Beginning of WisdomóThe Liberal Paper should not discuss Theological Questions AloneóA Column for ChildrenóCandor and KindnessóNothing should be Asserted that is not KnownóAbove All, teach the Absolute Freedom of the Mind. SECULARISM. The religion of Humanity; what it Embraces and what it AdvocatesóA Protest against Ecclesiastical TyrannyóBelieves in Building a Home hereóMeans Food and FiresideóThe Right to express your ThoughtóIts advice to every Human BeingóA Religion without Mysteries, Miracles, or Persecutions. CRITICISM OF "ROBERT ELSMERE," "JOHN WARD, PREACHER," AND "AN AFRICAN FARM." Religion unsoftened by InfidelityóThe Orthodox Minister whose Wife has a HeartóHonesty of Opinion not a Mitigating CircumstanceóRepulsiveness of an Orthodox LifeóJohn Ward an Object of PityóLyndall of the "African Farm"óThe Story of the HunteróDeath of WaldoóWomen the Caryatides of the ChurchóAttitude of Christianity toward other ReligionsóEgotism of the ancient Jews. THE LIBEL LAWS. All Articles appearing in a newspaper should be Signed by the WriteróThe Law if changed should throw greater Safeguards around the Reputation of the CitizenóPains should be taken to give Prominence to RetractionsóThe Libel Laws like a Bayonet in War. REV. DR. NEWTON'S SERMON ON A NEW RELIGION. Mr. Newton not Regarded as a ScepticóNew Meanings given to Old WordsóThe vanishing Picture of HellóThe AtonementóConfidence being Lost in the Morality of the GospelóExclusiveness of the ChurchesóThe Hope of Immortality and Belief in God have Nothing to do with Real ReligionóSpecial Providence a Mistake. AN ESSAY ON CHRISTMAS. The Day regarded as a HolidayóA Festival far older than ChristianityóRelics of Sun-worship in Christian CeremoniesóChristianity furnished new Steam for an old EngineóPagan Festivals correspond to OursóWhy Holidays are PopularóThey must be for the Benefit of the People. HAS FREETHOUGHT A CONSTRUCTIVE SIDE? The Object of Freethoughtówhat the Religionist calls "Affirmative and Positive"óThe Positive Side of FreethoughtóConstructive Work of Christianity. THE IMPROVED MAN. He will be in Favor of universal Liberty, neither Master nor Slave; of Equality and Education; will develop in the Direction of the Beautiful; will believe only in the Religion of this WorldóHis MottoóWill not endeavor to change the Mind of the "Infinite"óWill have no Bells or CensersóWill be satisfied that the Supernatural does not existóWill be Self-poised, Independent, Candid and Free. EIGHT HOURS MUST COME. The Working People should be protected by LawóLife of no particular Importance to the Man who gets up before Daylight and works till after DarkóA Revolution probable in the Relations between Labor and CapitalóWorking People becoming Educated and more IndependentóThe Government can Aid by means of Good LawsóWomen the worst PaidóThere should be no Resort to Force by either Labor or Capital. THE JEWS. Much like People of other ReligionsóTeaching given Christian Children about those who die in the Faith of AbrahamóDr. John Hall on the Persecution of the Jews in Russia as the Fulfillment of ProphecyóHostility of Orthodox early Christians excited by Jewish Witnesses against the FaithóAn infamous Chapter of HistoryóGood and bad Men of every FaithóJews should outgrow their own SuperstitionsóWhat the intelligent Jew Knows. CRUMBLING CREEDS. The Common People called upon to Decide as between the Universities and the SynodsóModern Medicine, Law, Literature and Pictures as against the OldóCreeds agree with the Sciences of their DayóApology the Prelude to RetreatóThe Presbyterian Creed Infamous, but no worse than the CatholicóProgress begins when Expression of Opinion is AllowedóExamining the Religions of other CountriesóThe Pulpit's Position LostóThe Dogma of Eternal Pain the Cause of the orthodox Creeds losing PopularityóEvery Church teaching this Infinite Lie must Fall. OUR SCHOOLS. Education the only Lever capable of raising MankindóThe School-house more Important than the ChurchóCriticism of New York's School-BuildingsóThe Kindergarten System RecommendedóPoor Pay of TeachersóThe great Danger to the Republic is Ignorance. VIVISECTION. The Hell of ScienceóBrutal Curiosity of VivisectorsóThe Pretence that they are working for the Good of ManóHave these scientific Assassins added to useful Knowledge?óNo Good to the Race to be Accomplished by TortureóThe Tendency to produce a Race of intelligent Wild Beasts. THE CENSUS ENUMERATOR'S OFFICIAL CATECHISM. Right of the Government to ask Questions and of the Citizen to refuse to answer themóMatters which the Government has no Right to pry intoóExposing the Debtor's financial ConditionóA Man might decline to tell whether he has a Chronic Disease or not. THE AGNOSTIC CHRISTMAS. Natural Phenomena and Myths celebratedóThe great Day of the first Religion, Sun-worshipóA God that Knew no Hatred nor Sought RevengeóThe Festival of Light. SPIRITUALITY. A much-abused WordóThe Early Christians too Spiritual to be CivilizedóCalvin and KnoxóPaine, Voltaire and Humboldt not SpiritualóDarwin also LackingóWhat it is to be really SpiritualóNo connection with Superstition. SUMTER'S GUN. What were thereby blown into Rags and RavelingsóThe Birth of a new Epoch announcedóLincoln made the most commanding Figure of the CenturyóStory of its Echoes. WHAT INFIDELS HAVE DONE. What might have been Asked of a Christian 100 years after ChristóHospitals and Asylums not all built for CharityóGirard CollegeóLick ObservatoryóCarnegie not an Orthodox ChristianóChristian CollegesóGive us Time. CRUELTY IN THE ELMIRA REFORMATORY. Brockway a SavageóThe Lash will neither develop the Brain nor cultivate the HeartóBrutality a FailureóBishop Potter's apostolical Remark. LAW'S DELAY. The Object of a TrialóJustice can afford to WaitóThe right of AppealóCase of Mrs. MaybrickóLife Imprisonment for MurderersóAmerican Courts better than the English. BIGOTRY OF COLLEGES. Universities naturally ConservativeóKansas State University's Objection to Ingersoll as a commencement OratoróComment by Mr. Depew (note)óAction of Cornell and the University of Missouri. A YOUNG MAN'S CHANCES TO-DAY. The Chances a few Years agoóCapital now RequiredóIncreasing competition in Civilized LifeóIndependence the first ObjectóIf he has something to say, there will be plenty to listen. SCIENCE AND SENTIMENT. Science goes hand in hand with ImaginationóArtistic and Ethical DevelopmentóScience destroys Superstition, not true ReligionóEducation preferable to LegislationóOur Obligation to our Children. "SOWING AND REAPING." Moody's Belief accounted foróA dishonest and corrupting DoctrineóA want of Philosophy and SenseóHave Souls in Heaven no Regrets?óMr. Moody should read some useful Books. SHOULD INFIDELS SEND THEIR CHILDREN TO SUNDAY SCHOOL? Teachings of orthodox Sunday SchoolsóThe ferocious God of the BibleóMiraclesóA Christian in Constantinople would not send his Child to a MosqueóAdvice to all AgnosticsóStrangle the Serpent of Superstition. WHAT WOULD YOU SUBSTITUTE FOR THE BIBLE AS A MORAL GUIDE? Character of the BibleóMen and Women not virtuous because of any BookóThe Commandments both Good and BadóBooks that do not help MoralityóJehovah not a moral GodóWhat is Morality?óIntelligence the only moral guide. GOVERNOR ROLLINS' FAST-DAY PROCLAMATION. Decline of the Christian Religion in New HampshireóOutgrown BeliefsóPresent-day Views of Christ and the Holy GhostóAbandoned Notions about the AtonementóSalvation for CredulityóThe Miracles of the New TestamentóThe Bible "not true but inspired"óThe "Higher Critics" riding two HorsesóInfidelity in the PulpitóThe "restraining Influences of Religion" as illustrated by Spain and PortugalóThinking, Working and PrayingóThe kind of Faith that has Departed. A LOOK BACKWARD AND A PROPHECY. The Truth Seeker congratulated on its Twenty-fifth BirthdayóTeachings of Twenty-five Years agoóDodging and evadingóThe Clerical Assault on DarwinóDraper, Buckle, Hegel, Spencer, EmersonóComparison of PrejudicesóVanished Belief in the DevilóMatter and ForceóContradictions Dwelling in UnityóSubstitutes for JehovahóA Prophecy. POLITICAL MORALITY. Argument in the contested Election Case of Strobach against HerbertóThe Importance of Honest ElectionsóPoisoning the Source of JusticeóThe Fraudulent Voter a Traitor to his Sovereign, the Will of the PeopleóPolitical Morality Imperative. A FEW REASONS FOR DOUBTING THE INSPIRATION OF THE BIBLE. Date and Manner of Composing the Old TestamentóOther Books not now in Existence, and Disagreements about the CanonóComposite Character of certain BooksóVarious VersionsóWhy was God's message given to the Jews alone?óThe Story of the Creation, of the Flood, of the Tower, and of Lot's wifeóMoses and Aaron and the Plagues of EgyptóLaws of SlaveryóInstructions by Jehovah Calculated to excite Astonishment and MirthóSacrifices and the ScapegoatóPassages showing that the Laws of Moses were made after the Jews had left the DesertóJehovah's dealings with his PeopleóThe Sabbath LawóProdigiesóJoshua's MiracleóDamned Ignorance and InfamyóJephthah's SacrificeóIncredible StoriesóThe Woman of Endor and the Temptation of DavidóElijah and ElishaóLoss of the Pentateuch from Moses to JosiahóThe Jews before and after being Abandoned by JehovahóWealth of Solomon and other Marvels. VOLUME XII.--MISCELLANY PROF. VAN BUREN DENSLOW'S "MODERN THINKERS." PREFACE TO DR. EDGAR C. BEALL'S "THE BRAIN AND THE BIBLE." PREFACE TO "MEN, WOMEN AND GODS." PREFACE TO "FOR HER DAILY BREAD." PREFACE TO "AGNOSTICISM AND OTHER ESSAYS." PREFACE TO "FAITH OR FACT." THE GRANT BANQUET. THIRTEEN CLUB DINNER. ROBSON AND CRANE DINNER. THE POLICE CAPTAINS' DINNER. GENERAL GRANT'S BIRTHDAY DINNER LOTOS CLUB DINNER, TWENTIETH ANNIVERSARY. MANHATTAN ATHLETIC CLUB DINNER. THE LIEDERKRANZ CLUB, SEIDL-STANTON BANQUET. THE FRANK B. CARPENTER DINNER. UNITARIAN CLUB DINNER. WESTERN SOCIETY OF THE ARMY OF THE POTOMAC BANQUET. LOTOS CLUB DINNER IN HONOR OF ANTON SEIDL. LOTOS CLUB DINNER IN HONOR OF REAR ADMIRAL SCHLEY. ADDRESS TO THE ACTORS' FUND OF AMERICA. THE CHILDREN OF THE STAGE. ADDRESS TO THE PRESS CLUB. THE CIRCULATION OF OBSCENE LITERATURE. CONVENTION OF THE NATIONAL LIBERAL LEAGUE. CONVENTION OF THE AMERICAN SECULAR UNION. THE RELIGIOUS BELIEF OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN. ORGANIZED CHARITIES. SPAIN AND THE SPANIARDS. OUR NEW POSSESSIONS. A FEW FRAGMENTS ON EXPANSION. IS IT EVER RIGHT FOR HUSBAND OR WIFE TO KILL RIVAL? PROFESSOR BRIGGS. FRAGMENTS. EFFECT OF THE WORLD'S FAIR ON THE HUMAN RACE. SABBATH SUPERSTITION. A TRIBUTE TO GEORGE JACOB HOLYOAKE. AT THE GRAVE OF BENJAMIN W. PARKER. A TRIBUTE TO EBON C. INGERSOLL A TRIBUTE TO THE REV. ALEXANDER CLARK. AT A CHILD'S GRAVE. A TRIBUTE TO JOHN G. MILLS. A TRIBUTE TO ELIZUR WRIGHT. A TRIBUTE TO MRS. IDA WHITING KNOWLES. A TRIBUTE TO HENRY WARD BEECHER. A TRIBUTE TO ROSCOE CONKLING. A TRIBUTE TO RICHARD H. WHITING. A TRIBUTE TO COURTLANDT PALMER. A TRIBUTE TO MRS. MARY H. FISKE. A TRIBUTE TO HORACE SEAVER. A TRIBUTE TO LAWRENCE BARRETT. A TRIBUTE TO WALT WHITMAN. A TRIBUTE TO PHILO D. BECKWITH. A TRIBUTE TO ANTON SEIDL. A TRIBUTE TO DR. THOMAS SETON ROBERTSON. A TRIBUTE TO THOMAS CORWIN. A TRIBUTE TO ISAAC H. BAILEY. JESUS CHRIST. LIFE. *** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WORKS OF ROBERT G. INGERSOLL, COMPLETE CONTENTS *** Updated editions will replace the previous one—the old editions will be renamed. Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project Gutenberg™ electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG™ concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away—you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark license, especially commercial redistribution. START: FULL LICENSE THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK To protect the Project Gutenberg™ mission of promoting the free distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work (or any other work associated in any way with the phrase “Project Gutenberg”), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project Gutenberg™ License available with this file or online at www.gutenberg.org/license. Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg™ electronic works 1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg™ electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property (trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg™ electronic works in your possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project Gutenberg™ electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8. 1.B. “Project Gutenberg” is a registered trademark. It may only be used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg™ electronic works even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project Gutenberg™ electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg™ electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below. 1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (“the Foundation” or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project Gutenberg™ electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the United States and you are located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project Gutenberg™ mission of promoting free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg™ works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg™ name associated with the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg™ License when you share it without charge with others. 1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project Gutenberg™ work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any country other than the United States. 1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg: 1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg™ License must appear prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg™ work (any work on which the phrase “Project Gutenberg” appears, or with which the phrase “Project Gutenberg” is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed, copied or distributed: This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook. 1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg™ electronic work is derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase “Project Gutenberg” associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg™ trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9. 1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg™ electronic work is posted with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked to the Project Gutenberg™ License for all works posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work. 1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg™ License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg™. 1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project Gutenberg™ License. 1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary, compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg™ work in a format other than “Plain Vanilla ASCII” or other format used in the official version posted on the official Project Gutenberg™ website (www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original “Plain Vanilla ASCII” or other form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg™ License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1. 1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying, performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg™ works unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9. 1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing access to or distributing Project Gutenberg™ electronic works provided that: • You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from the use of Project Gutenberg™ works calculated using the method you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg™ trademark, but he has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in Section 4, “Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation.” • You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg™ License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg™ works. • You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of receipt of the work. • You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free distribution of Project Gutenberg™ works. 1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg™ electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of the Project Gutenberg™ trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below. 1.F. 1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project Gutenberg™ collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg™ electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain “Defects,” such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment. 1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the “Right of Replacement or Refund” described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project Gutenberg™ trademark, and any other party distributing a Project Gutenberg™ electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. 1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further opportunities to fix the problem. 1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you ‘AS-IS’, WITH NO OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE. 1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions. 1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone providing copies of Project Gutenberg™ electronic works in accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg™ electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg™ work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg™ work, and (c) any Defect you cause. Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg™ Project Gutenberg™ is synonymous with the free distribution of electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from people in all walks of life. Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg™’s goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg™ collection will remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure and permanent future for Project Gutenberg™ and future generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org. Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit 501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal Revenue Service. The Foundation’s EIN or federal tax identification number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state’s laws. The Foundation’s business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to date contact information can be found at the Foundation’s website and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation Project Gutenberg™ depends upon and cannot survive without widespread public support and donations to carry out its mission of increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations ($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt status with the IRS. The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate. While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who approach us with offers to donate. International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff. Please check the Project Gutenberg web pages for current donation methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate. Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg™ electronic works Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg™ concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and distributed Project Gutenberg™ eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support. Project Gutenberg™ eBooks are often created from several printed editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition. Most people start at our website which has the main PG search facility: www.gutenberg.org. This website includes information about Project Gutenberg™, including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.